Sunday, February 28, 2016

April 8 2008 ?


A casual aside glance at my bookshelf spotted one page of hand-printed Adam dated April 8/9th, 1999 hanging by a thread out from a whole mess of other older Adam writings; the only piece of paper sticking out, and I haven't a clue as to why or how this one sheet got itself singled out and pushed out of the pack. Curious, I pulled it the rest of the way out and was quite surprised to read of what I was thinking 9 years ago; and here goes: I will copy verbatum.
     “To anybody and everybody and yes: mom, too. Belief or fantasy? It's your call.
     At the molecular level (or atomic level, if you will or must), the biosphere of earth (as an integrated part of the overall universe) functions with a totality of interrelationship that, although, in the 'physical' sense: electro-magnetically-chemically, one could guess . . . one can only guess at the 'spiritual' dimension . . . earth, as each of its living parts, has . . . must have a consciousness. As in a hive of bees, the hill of ants, 10,000 flying ducks, or schooling fish . . . we too are all with a common consciousness of similar purposes to those driving their whole collective. As in these examples, one could hypothesize that all of earth's biomasses similarly have some sort of 'collective consciousness, although it was JUNG, I believe it was, used 'subconscious' in place of consciousness . . . semantics?) Functioning as a whole, each bit of chemical, with its charges, its magnetic influences, exists to fulfill a destiny, seemingly maybe unique in and to its individuality, but beyond that, has just got to also have its role in prolonging earth's existence as well.
     Many, I believe, have thought of earth's resource as finite. I'm sure that you know this is false. Each day, untold tons of chemicals (and neurons, protons, photons, etc.) arrive into our sphere of influence. Things meteorlogical—logical: key part of that word—hydrogens, oxygen, carbon, iron, etc., etc., space dust. . .
     Anyway: We are coalesced into this human form from and for whatever many and various rationales . . . assembled from all the millions, if not billions or trillions of our parts, each with its 'mission', its memory, its 'spirit,' its 'soul' . . .assembled  with our consciousness perfectly already extant. As we divide and multiply, so do our abilities for elaboration of thought, memory, re-memory, and god-only-knows what all else goes on within that other 80-90% of our brain that we so-called supposedly don't use . . . HA!! We use it. Our puny conscious' consciousness just is too limited to be able to sense (consciously, that is) all of what our body/brain is doing and responding to . . . at all every single micro-second and milli-second of our lives. I've heard 'cutting edge' published respected physicists lately talking in terms of 10 or twelve dimensions and can believe their not-so-farfetched theorizings. Even though Jerit tries to remind me that it is an it rather than a gendered god, I prefer 'goddess-only-knows' over god-only-knows . . . (This was a letter to the Fourman family in response to the Paul Fourman ceremonial memorial that I could not attend) Anyway: All of Paul will be reborn/re-used/recycled, as it were. Of this I have no doubt. We all live over and over and over throughout eternity. Our bits and pieces are never without purpose in support of earth's continuum. Does your atheism allow for this? Yes: We have lost Paul, but he is not lost to earth.”
   Pretty weird, huh? I am just going to save this in the computer anyway, although I probably should just delete it and move on forward. Have you found out that hydrogen (and oxygen) molecules are released from their bond with oxygen at where water makes contact with the chemical: titanium dioxide?

June 2 2008


02-06-08 I queried why you had expressed your willingness to receive letters from me; and what in the nature of my being might have interest for you, whom I must admit that I barely know, really, to any significant degree—other than, due to commonly shared inherited genetic factors that do contribute some commonly-held sense and sense of sensibilities. Common sense; horse sense: The stuff that just naturally wells up within us in a kind of sympathetic vibration with those natural forces that do make for most of who and what we are and become. What differences might be defined—at least in part—stem from me having mostly felt fatherless as a young'un, where as you had no such traumatic influences in that area of your emotional-conditioning(s). And, of  course, our different sexual-orientations . . . I am most definitely not the least bit gay. I have observed that whole genre of societal abberation evolve from those early days of the psychedelic experience of San Francisco and surroundings to its present day affected state-of-pride, etc. I feel way more sympathetic with the uppity female PUSSY POWER! teeshirts, etc. than I feel with or for the gay population. By no means do I feel support for the redneck and Xtian church's veheminent and endless disparaging tirades against the gays. I am so hetero, not the it matters one whit anymore at this stage/age . . .
   Stae-of-grace is my mantra these days: State-of-grace. This implies to me much that makes my heart warm and my spirit soar. If only I can grow this state's length of endurances . . . being so far away from most vestiges of the larger and far more complex world 'out there,' I am blessed with this state as it surrounds me and envelops me within this mostly quite natural space and ambience which fills my days and nights all except the townrun every fifth or sixth day, when, for as few hours as I can organize and arrange, I have to drive my old sick truck all the darn way—12 miles—to town for more coffee, cream, spinach, lemon, TP, etc.; as well as more gasoline for the trip home and a little extra to tide me over on my short little runs up and down and across hill around here; plus enough to get me back to town six days hence . . .
   So: Who am I/ And what could I possibly be worth or of use to one such as my dear spinster half-sis? Or of interest? What? Hell: What I know, I know, but to try and give it sense to another is a near-difficult thing to accomplish; and why, anyway, should I try? What could possibly be 'in it' for you? for me? Well: You could offer to edit my writing attempts . . . but of course: this is a ridiculous suggestion. Do you know that mom edited 43 pages of one of my earliest manuscripts? And that Jadene edited (with eight typewritten two-sided pages of commentary) about one-third of what I was passing for 'my book' over three years ago now?
   The damn book deal is a pisser. In that I cannot seem to come up with an entry into that old book concept's storyline that makes any (literary) sense to me. There are as many ways to begin a book idea as there are grains of sand, and that's my 'problem:' just trying to decide upon which course-of-action will become the 'way-to-go' with this book-writing thingy attempted effort at near sheer lunacy. Oh yeah: I'm gonna get rich and be a best seller, hee hee. What a dumb fantasy, huh? Which of course, translates to whatta dumb me, eh? Heck, that aint no biggee really, I have been much and done much that could only qualify as dumb, and I admit it—laugh about it now, lots. Every time another stoopid blunder I have just made becomes self-evident to me, I bust out laughing again to myself, and think: God! Whatta stoopid! And I vow once more to try not to be such a stupid in future; but there are just too many of Murphy's Laws for a guy like me to other than laugh them off one by one as they go swimming through my fingers . . . Now, I am one expert when it comes to Murphy's Law type occurrence, and they no longer surprise me quite so much anymore, as they once did when I was younger and quite a bit 'hotter.' I like this being way cooler now. It is so very much easier than when I was 'hot.' I can kick back and ignore just about any and all (attempted) influences from without ny being and just putter around or not as I feel, and not feel way too guilt-ridden for not being a contributer to society and like that, etc. And still: I say (write) that I do not really know who I really am or could be. GRACE state of: 's where I wanna be. It seems to fix just about any old thang.

May 27 2008


                                                                                                      May 27, 2008
   If I think of now  not as of the current moment but as of the whole of the breadth and depth of all of my life's events—both the remembered moments and the 'unremembered'--in which every moment was the now of that moment . . . To put it another way: Even though every moment before now was 'then' and no longer now, still: It remains a part of now . . . like I mean: That now has always been a part of every moment of my life and therefore (I postulate) now equates to every one of those moments I have both consciously and subconsciously experienced. To some degree, I also include moments from before I was a born being wherein I postulate a belief that those, call them, ancestrally-remembered moments from before I came to life—and that I presume are transferable from one generation to the next through the as yet not-fully-understood genetic coding—it seems to me that my DNA comes replete with much memory attached. How else can I explain eruptions of thoughts and actions from within myself that I am positive no one ever told me I should be this way or that way. Some of the stuff I just seemed to have fallen into without any prodding from without just surfaced, independent from all outside press and instruction. Thoughts about what was either good or bad, right or wrong, beyond my 'formal' trainings and teachings, browbeats, and all the other encouragements and proferred enticements (bribes), etc., and dire warnings . . . all that stuff adults do (or did in my case, anyway) to try to teach or otherwise instill good behavior in their kids. Stuff comes along to perplex, then entice you to seek some sort of resolution, which then sometimes requires some decision on my part whether it is good or bad, safe to experiment with, or ought better to be left to one with more expertise in the subject to try to tackle. Often, I chose to investigate, and then to, less-frequently, explore or experiment with potential solution ideas that just swelled up from below my actual consciousness to present themselves to an oft-startled thinker . . . but some experimental proceedurings did, in fact, yield what might be properly defined as wisdom . . . probably only two or three-in-ten but they are the pivotal ones well worth having discovered them and would always and ever prove to be beneficial as my NOW progressed along its timeline; always being now, though bits and pieces of it fell back into some then that was mostly no longer now . . . until I remembered it again on my cyclic internal memory-rotations.
   I really don't quite know, actually, what I am trying to write about here, except that I thought to more fully cess out the possibility, probability of now not just being this here momentary moment, but actually the whole schmeer, the whole nine yards' worth of my endless processions of momentary moments of experiential bliss; plus the agony, ecstacy, and all the in betweens of the mix of genius eruptions overlaid with brain fart type bunglings to confound the mix and help always keep me on my (fig.) toes and ever apprehensive probably to near the same degree as must be the African Massai man stalking, or being stalked on the African savanna as he tries to protect his cows. I know that I am reaching here for an example of how I sometimes felt—though thousands of miles and a century removed from the Massai peoples of the sub-Sahara—similar degrees of alertness, adrenalin, and their accompanying levels of stress as any wildlands dweller, indigenous individual must feel and deal with. Here, in 'the west,' we also have the luxury (?) of deciding not to deal with it and just get stoned or drunk or otherwise distracted from such heavy heavy thinking . . . having a 'job' to do or a 'mission-in-life' or to life gives some outlet to any stuff that probably ought to be vented from bogging up the machinery in there, in your and my (and every other living and non-'living' thing as well) inner workings before it builds up too much pressure and goes bananas and mucks up—or, at least, Murphy's Law kicks in to spur a spin on things and have you (me) scratching your (my) head in perrenial quiz about such things as 'the law of averages' and wha hoppen'd?                                   (Boy, has this page ever been a loser!)

May 28 2008


05-28-08 Thanks to the resolutions to understandings that had still eluded me prior to Zietgiest, I find myself even smugger than I already was about my distrust of 'the system.' It is comforting to feel that smugness envelop me as I observe the progression of outer-world events. Though it is difficult to keep myself from becoming angry about what's goin' on, the surity of the inevitability of negative emotional wallowing's overall negative impact and its resulting poorer outcomes disallows me letting myself feel anger and angry. That being said (written), stuff is really hitting the fan, now, aint it? What is of major concern, if that's what I feel when I think of the masses' sufferings, both yesterday, today, and probably tomorrow, is how seriously compromised and otherwise stultified too large of a cross-section of our society's peoples seem to be in such a fog as to not be able to understand what is being perpetrated upon them by the system's exploitive nature; and of the rather too painfully obvious fate awaiting just too very many of our peers. Peers? Well, in a general way. Of course, each of us is (potentially) unique enough to be able to claim not everyone is our peer; that is to say (write) not our brother or sister humane-desiring human, with the overarching overall all-encompassing overview of the universality of the universal picture of awesome forces at work upon ev-ry one of all the teeniest tiniest little bits and pieces of all of every-thing and everybody, and of how that awesome collection of forces-at-work seem to have a philosophical bent toward the encouragement of growth; expansion in (hopefully) the more positve-seeming of realms. All this bloodthirstiness going on around the world is most certainly just (?) an abberation, a mutation toward the wrong-headedness of the negatives, pretty much covered by a mention of the seven deadly sins, plus awfully shameful violations of Golden Rule. But now I can receive the world's news with a smirk of smugly-held opinion that this tragedy can only be taken in in comedic terms, if I am to remain Sane(?). I mean: Highway robbery isn't the least bit funny, but what is a poorboy to do? This poorboy chuckles to him self at the sheer audacity of some of the stuff I see going down; the sheer outrageous audacity of, most definitely a lunatic fringe, albeit the wealthiest of the wealthy are the ones gone all goo-gah over you-know-what. I chuckle to my smug little self, 'Them boys has sure got gall; no matter how misdirected it all too often seems. I had a swelled head once, so I can kinda empathize with the fat cats' point-of-view type perspectives and general egomaniacality and sociopathic operational methodoligies . . . empathize, while not in the least condoning what they are up to and how they are chosing to go about their nefarious dirty works. Kharma may not catch up with them in this lifetime, but I can feel confident that what goes around quite surely does come right on  around, eventually: They'll get theirs; one way or another the hammer will fall. The sad part about this is that we all is getting hammered before the fact of their finally reaping their just deserts and final 'reward.' I understand the motivating forces at work behind the hard push for more, ever more. I sense its wrongness-of-attitudenal focus; and this does (or at least should anyway) allow some forgiveness. But of course, a lot of what is being perpetrated by you know who is unforgivable--or, at least, isn't and won't be let slide very easily, no matter how hard I try. No matter how excrutiatingly-intensely I would wish and hope that I could. Because: If I could completely forgive everything that 'bothers' my thinker, then it would have a nicer day—or at least ought to have improved potential chances for having a nicer, pleasanter day (and night, thank you very much.) I have been actively working to balance up my own Kharma bank account toward anything over neutral that I may yet be able to pull off, since about 1970 or thereabouts; with many setbacks along the rock-strewn pathways of my life since first realizing that I was rather quite overdrawn in my Kharma account about 1970. My thinking then was that I had spent the first half of my life putting negative, unloving dollars into that account, and, that if I managed to stay pretty much mostly more on the 'straight and narrow' for the second half of my life: maybe I could remedy that rather discouraging realization I had, way back then. That second half has now come and gone, plus eight years, and I do feel that I have narrowed the gap significantly and am now close enough to that goal to wallow in the glory of its granted state-of-grace. It's all uphill from here for me—while all seemingly pretty much downhill for the rest of (unelightened) humankind—except for us kind of hotter shots, when it comes to brainy power. We still have an excellent chance for achieving some of them fabled happinesses of the pursuit-of-happiness guarantee.

June 13 2008

                                                          06.13.08.odt

   I watch, listen, and hear what I understand to be, in its essence, a repeat of the financial/economic rise and then fall of the decade of the nineteen twenties. Many emotions well up within my personnae in response; most of them rather more negative than my always-preferred positives. This inclines me into a wished-for denial state wherein I might ignore such heartfelt sympathy for those billions of earthlings who have yet to figure out and understand how poorly they are being regarded and respected as the manipulator class continues upon its not-so-merry way to exploit and exploit. It's not only just the human population that is being shat upon. All earth and sea life is under a nasty and, I think maybe, a truly severe threat; from all manner of human-concocted stuff's runoffs and atmospheric 'dumping.' Mix in the escaping radioactive particles from this and that sort of 'leakage,' in addition to the 'depleted' uranium-laced munitions the US gov't has been exploding all over the place (earth: all of its territories.)
  But in this typing exercise, I mostly want to remain focused upon the blatant thievery I see the 'establishment' power elite currently pulling off. I want to point out how literally tens of millions of my peers are being fleeced; and fleeced so big time that I am aghast that there isn't any rioting going on over all this rape and plundering and pillaging being perpetrated upon all uss basically helpless fools. I almost wonder why it is that people are not getting as upset as I should think they would be, but my wonder is tempered by understandings I hold with respect to how the system of public schooling has deliberately withheld many critical-thinking skills from the majority of the general population. Withheld information vital to making serious and sound judgements and decision-making. Not only withheld it from the schools' curriculum but also from being disseminated in the god-of-media: The tube.
   And to further worsen matters to do with losses of common sense, the schools no longer emphasize acquiring agricultural and agrarian 'horse sense' wisdoms to their charges, rendering them—the many—unable to get started and become successful providers, outside of a money-based economy.
   Jeez! I foresee a pretty nasty bunch of years coming from here on for a spell that might even rival (or surpass!) what the history books and pundits call “The Great (?) Depression” of the nineteen-thirties. All the parts of the scenario are certainly well in place, and the fat cats and big boys are grabbing big time while they can get away with it; which seems to be just forever and ever far too long, now, anymore. “Enough already” cries the spirit of my heart and soul; but of course, nowadays: Spirit, heart, and soul do not seem to have much influence upon those currently in control of running their version of worldwide 'operations.'

   Sad though this state of affairs really truly is, I, personally, feel that I must persevere in the gatherings of my own personal happinesses in spite of all what is going on outside of my tiny whirl in that outer world out there beyond my simple life's general daily experience; and try to endure the ragged sadnesses that rip and rend human societies worldwide with some sense of dignity and grace.

July 5 2008 "Dear Ken & Friends"


July 6th 2008 – Dear Ken & friends:        
     Your gushing embarrasses me, more than it flatters. I know that this is through no fault of your own; but it's just that nobody has ever has been so complimentary. I forgive your attempt to befriend as being all in a decent and friendly spirit, it's just that my own idiot self's thinker rarely thinks of me in very complimentary terms.
     The book I was and still may be am writing, slash, rewriting . . . after a half-dozen failed attempts to give it a title, currently is titled Hardway in my mind's screwball (but in a nice sweet way) eye. The text I sent in to the Library of Congress in 2000 was titled Stars Last, but Stars Last didn't last as a title for my book, but remains a chapter title. For nearly the whole of my life, I have been Hardway; to such a great degree as is nearly undeniable. I didn't become aware of this until right around the time, or shortly thereafter, of that monster psychedelic upwelling that surrounded me and had its way with me. I grew up there in the thick of it, so to speak, and what musical friendships I did have were enough to give me and my Scot sense of thrift, the free pass into the ceremonies; and I thoroughly enjoyed myself's experiences therein, on their dime. I mean, I dunno how other to explain this grinding propensity and affinity for being so cheap. Like, when I get extra money, I do blow it rather stupidly sometimes . . . But for this second two-thirds of my life, I have conserved and conserved and husbanded, and rebuilt, remodeled, salvaged, and or built a major portion of the shack-grade structures I have lived in and out from—11 of them! And I justified this by always thinking of the 'rent' I was not having to earn money to pay for; and, of course, the less money I felt under pressure to procure, the less negative and stress-causinf stuff there was to hinder my own truer progress through the changes inborn in my dna (?) to give growth through the many beings we are born with—or, at least, that is how I feel about what I seem to have been 'dealt'--and therefore: the quicker I might even maybe grow up. Hardway took an awful—too awful—long time of it, growing up. I mean: All the 'tools' were 'there', plain as day; caregivers of my youth and toward manhood took care to inform me of what all good children of good stock and decent parents must be informed of. I cannot in the least fault them for they were, as were their immediate ancestors before them, derailed from our millenia old agrarian roots. But not derailed from the bloodlustinesses of butchers, plain and simple. We have been slaughtering other life seemingly forever. It is so in our blood; re: dna, that I fail to fathom how mankind is ever going to be able to break this habit: It was  just (seemingly) too necessary for too long of a time in our history (and herstory) for a few generations to be able to eradicate. I like my pork fat. Haven't bought or eaten beef since the sixties. Lived a fairly spartan existence and vegan for a few years; but my second child-bearing partner was an unreformed meat-eater and, of course, I went along. Philosophically, I think of meat in terms of being a flavoring agent and not as the main course. And I am getting way off the subject I had intended to pursue when I began this. The flattery is embarrassing, but funny and comic in extremis. And, in some vague and indefinable way, sort of makes up for a lot of rather more badmouth directed my way through the years--verily earned by just being Hardway—by ny critics.  *  It was my waterfront and waterborne mates and matesses who first saw the truth in nicknaming me Hardway; and I lived with it and learned to thrust out my chest with pride, when called for, and say: Yeah: None other. What the hell, I figured, just about everything I try to do is not often very linear and takes at least three times before I 'get' it straight enough for rock and roll or government work--speaking of which, I'd rather not say.
     So: Hardway it was, was it? Yep. I absorbed this character willingly and with many friendly associations. Associations (thoughts/remembrances) that all too often could make some cry, but when you are (I am) a Hardway type, you just start to chuckle or guffaw out loud at the sheer ridiculousness of the multitudes of Murphy's Law variations there are! But back to wood boats is where I want to try to focus a paragraph or two (although there is a far larger body of related materials that will all too often tend to clutter my more essential and basic boat thoughts.)
     The dream—at least my dream—is, was, and will always be: A whole logtruckful of—no, let's take that back—a whole forty feet long cargo container full of gently curved lower tree trunks: forty footers! Oboy! Bring 'em home---in my novel, they are old-growth teak logs from Burma—and whack 'em up into your (my) unsinkable dream, for once and forever; and no more messing around with inferior product. I served what amounts to an apprenticeship in wood boat-wright ways; plus had enough time in sailing to have grasped a few of the intangibles possible in the life of a person who has to travel about in the deeper waters of the salt water seas. Wood floats. That is the be all and end all of how I feel about: Why only wood? Cement boats are way too fragile, if you ask me. Yes, of course, I know that there are individuals who have sailed them long and far; but you will never catch me trying to hitch a ride on one of them; no way. Steel, if done artistically for true sea-kindly shape, can become an intoxicating nautical dream—wow: the indestructible boat; visualizing it banging away on some rocky reefs, possibly south of the equator . . . I have seen the finest product of the alumiweld aluminum boats and—providing they are fabricated from all the same grade stock of aluminum: or electrolysis will disintegrate the aluminum's integrity too soon—that almost inspired me; but, again: that metal potential deathtrap, if it gets full of water, just doesn't inspire the kind of hope-of-survival that I sense from images of a wooden boat. Metal boats pop seams too. Plastic is way way inferior, except for built-in styrofoam floatation. Decide upon a shape—and the more like a seabird's ass under the waterline, the better; although more difficult to pull off—erect some sort of framework to start bending boards onto and fitting. I have seen two other fellows render knockoffs, built-from-scratch, of the famous Spray of Joshua Slocum's 1895 book Sailing Alone Around The World; one done in the lapstrake style, where you overlap the planking and fit frames in later; and the other done in carvel style: plank-edge to plank-edge, erecting the interior framing framework first. Dudley fished his lapstrake, but Peter just lived aboard his while happily raking in the dough with a business card that read: “I can fix your leaks!” as one of the finest cabinet-maker's embodiment of shipboard (or boatboard) cabinetry, as well as a journeyman level wood boat (carvel planked) caulker—aside from maybe a little dab of fungicidal bedding compound in between the overlapping plank-edges of the lapstrake planked boat, there is no caulking required; it is accomplished by hammer-and-anvil ing the copper rivets tighter.
     I worked on and was close friends with a fellow who bought a 41 feet long Mekong River sampan, surplus from Uncle Sam for $296! You ever read the Defense Surplus Sales Catalogues? He did and found this boat and bid on it and won it. God: Whatta dream. A bit splintered up, cracked and with all its caulking fallen out, up on blocks, dry as a bone in the boatyard he had it delivered down to; where a dozen of we of his brethern and mates, plus old ladies, spent a twelve hour summer day doing what we could to render it ready to be put in the water that very evening, by boatyard demand—no arguement—hardnose, something about insurance liability, yahdiddy yahdiddy. 
     Built of long teak planking about two inches thick on Apitong frames (indonesian hardwood relative of the mahogany family; a definitely superior hardwood) on an Ironwood keel—uncle sam had confiscated it and stuffed two gimmy (GMC) 671s (large 6 cylinder diesel engines) into it and mounted a fifty caliber machine gun on the bow and it survived the Vietnam War to be carted home to Mare Island Naval Shipyard in Vallejo California to be stripped of its machinery, where my friend Steve found it. It wasn't two years or thereabouts before he had that 41 footer up and running and seaworthy and was making fifty grand a year fishing it! The beauty of salvage, if immersing oneself in green slime and salt crust, and usually losing skin, can be thought of as beautiful, is when a guy like Steve finds a thirty year old Caterpillar four-banger for only $200 and manages to get it totally back up to snuff for another $200—unheard of in Caterpillar prices—and goes out and makes a couple-hundred grand with it for a few years . . . and then goes down the tubes on cocaine abuse . . . But hey, the expression comes to mind: Bid 'em high and sleep in the streets. A final word about this sampan: After two whole days and nights of two gasoline pumps going all the time, Steve got the boat the 30 miles from Vallejo to Waldo Point, north Sausalito with an outboard motor, and slammed (fig.) it on our muddy beach there to further caulk and clean out the hull. Up in the very bow was a patched over hole in the top left plank—a shitty non-nautical blunder of some us gov't landlubber worker's idea of a boatpatch—and Steve pried off most of the Bondo and plywood . . . and finds an unexploded ordinance stuck into the stem of the boat! It made the front page of the next day's local paper: “Bomb squad called out!”
 Ah: The boat dream.  Out in the ocean, when in larger seas, the water levels rise up and up and even come on board now and again. Scuppers let most of it slide and slither back overboard. Worthy of note, for sea boats, is the boat-builder who builds some tumble home into the topside shape of the upper works of the hull—lean the bulwarks inward a little—curl the top of the boat's stem inward, so that the two highest planks of the boat actually lean in toward the center of the boat. Why? Well, when those higher than usual waves ride up almost to coming on board, and after they have tried their best to inundate you, the lean of these upper planks and bulwarks just makes most of the water fall outward, back off and down toward where it came from; plus this shape reduces the amounts of spray created by straighter or more flared shaped front ends of boats. This holds true for the stern as well. Geez; I don't quite know why I am typing all this. Maybe it's because I do not want to start retyping other stuff that surely does need retyping. Although I lost all computer files of the book, I was left with a freshly printed-out hard manuscript. This was in late June of '05, so you can see how long it has been me avoiding coming to terms with the continuum of the book-writing thingy. Yes: I probably have, or could have some sort of marketable product of some sort, but being Hardway and all, it often seems like such a bugaboo of a row to hoe. Sticktuitiveness has never been one of my strong points—except when it comes to not eating what I think of as: Old Dead Food . . . *  My truck caught fire and burned up last month and every ounce of sticktuitiveness that I have been able to muster has been focused upon getting another (30 yr old) truck legal and reliably servicable. Having worked the bulk of my life in things mechanical—wood, metal, processes, rigging—I hate mechanicing. Well, hate may be too harsh a word, but it can just drive a poorboy nuts sometimes, even if he is a reasonably decent mechanic. Although lying down under the back of the truck the other day while hacksawing, upside-down, through the four totally-frozen nuts and bolts holding the receiver hitch framework onto the frame--so I could then get at the gastank for replacement: holes in it—is not anyone's idea of fun, I actually enjoyed taking care of business on my new (old) truck. (Neither a cheater pipe on my breaker bar nor the tire shop's air-driven impact wrench loosened any of them.) All 'work' gives the worker that satisfaction of having gotten something actually done instead of just wishing it so and staying depressed because the stupid tool isn't right yet and you can't just use it like you are supposed to be able to; like it is supposed to function on your behalf and not the other way around. God: I'm getting way off subject again.
     Do you understand the necessity of swivvels in any line—rope or wire cable—undergoing stress? Anchor lines included. I once dragged anchor in a high gust of wind—maybe fifty or bit more—because the stretching of the rope applied enough a twisting to actually flip the anchor out of its muddy grip on the bottom and blew up on the gravelly beach across from Waldo, where I stayed stuck for the low tide and needed some assistance in getting the (house)boat back off on the next high tide in the morning. Believe it or not, I ended up on that very same beach a few months later by quite another failure of my gear, but that time, I was not blown quite so high and dry and just rowed my anchor out into deeper water off the beach and, at the high tide in the morning, just pulled my own self back off that beach that time. And no: No serious hull damage occurred in either grounding. A guy like Hardway needs a little, if not a lot of luck to survive the waterborne fare. And as far as I am concerned, as long as the lucky breaks don't lag too far behind the unlucky ones, I am a happy camper.
     Another sweet boat dream is, after you have built your twenty-some odd or thirty-some odd feet long boat, (and fastened it with copper or bronze,) you add a thick layer of copper sheeting over the whole hull. Spendy? Damn rights, but copper is poison to marine organisims. And did you know that barnacles cannot get a hold on any surface that has been smeared with STP oil treatment? Those suckers were growing right on the (42 inch—42 x40 three blade) bronze propeller of the fifty foot harbor tug I had for seven years. That is until I smeared the prop with two cans' worth of STP.  About a year later, I put the tug on the beach to do some touch up bottom painting and check on the prop--which was always getting dinged by flotsam or jetsam—to see if it needed my efforts with two sledgehammers to straighten out the dinged edges—and the STP was still doing its job! Do you have fresh water barnacles up there?  *  And then there are the semi-submersible wackos; except that the smashings of surface wave action are significantly reduced in a semi or submersible unit. *  I have noticed that (Douglas) fir trees from higher on the hills seem to have more strength than the ones harvested from down in the valleys. I could be wrong on this—Hardway is wronger oftener than he is right—but this fact is my impression from personal experience, felling the two different strengths from those two different locations: the lower-elevation growing one did not measure up to the mast I was or had been envisioning whereas the higher-growing one did. I don't know. What else? I'm getting tired of sitting here typing for this session of the here and now.  *   So: Please: stop showering me with such glorious praise. It makes me nervous, or is unsettling in some vague and nearly indefinable way. And I am just happy to have an 'excuse' to maybe write something to somebody who doesn't just read and think: god, what a boob. I will send more later. And so long for this letter-frum-Adam.  *   I enjoyed the Owsly update blurb. His effect still lives in my everyday consciousness, and forms many basis of my outlook and perspective on the world and my interrelationship(s) with it, although I quit using it when the Owsly stuff quit being available, and found other more naturally-occurring “spiritfood” substitutes.

July 6 2008


6-7-8 (later)(2nd letter) The time is circa 1970,place: Richardson Bay, off of Sausalito, CA ---  It was one of those typical spring afternoons when the fog would begin its tri-weekly creep inland from the  Pacific Ocean, just a few miles over the nine-hundred feet high (now: Marin Headlands Nat'l Park) coastal range foothills from my home bay of Richardson, off the Sausalito shore. At two P.M., it was too early for rumaging the Army Corps of Engineers' woodpile. Each Monday-through-Friday afternoon, the core's three net-dragging vessels whose charge was to keep the shipping lanes of San Francisco Bay clear of hazards to navigation, would come chugging up our bay with their day's catch of marine debris, flotsam and jetsam, for the crane on the core's debris-unloading dock to help them unload. After their 4:30 PM quitting time—by 5 o'clock sure—we would-be wanna-be piratically-inclined water rats were never denied ingress to the pile. Sometimes, this pile would grow to really outlandish proportions, often reaching more than two-hundred feet around its perimeter and forty-fifty feet high! Multiply my few tidbits of rejected parts being thrown back overboard by the thousand mile shorelines of S F Bay plus all the folks up both rivers for hundreds more miles who dump unwanted wood parts into the rivers, and maybe then one might imagine this awesome pile of ever-changing big-hunks! litter and its attraction to us of who thought in terms of marine dumpster-diving. I think we weren't ever hasseled by the army core's people was because we absconded with such a quantity of wood hunks and chunks and multitudes of assorted marine hardware scraps still clinging, we saved them a lot of their expenses of removing by truck to landfill. Docks, solid wood floats, whole and partial old sunk or abandoned barges, wrecked boats and boat parts, bumpers, lines, cleats, shackles, turnbuckles, throughbolts and drift pins: long thickish steel bars for use to 'nail' larger chunks of wood together with. The variety and surprises were always a regular source of 'entertainment' to myself and those whom I am pleased to refer to as my brethren—and those too few sisthrens--whose images, by the way, inspire much of the secondary (if not primary) thrust of my book-writing effort. In early attempts at designing its dedication page, I gushed overly over them—the women—ended it with something resembling:  
”And to goddess-like boulders everywhere, without whose patient stewardship, this could never have been,” or some such. Yes: My somewhat-inherited and somewhat self-evolved fantasy images with respect to the old-timey sailors' superstitions about sea sirens, I have taken license to use this in the storyline, because to me, as a one-time serious sailing enthusiast, I 'like' the possibilities inherant in the fable, in fact, have encountered phenomenon wherein pressures from other-than-me appeared to my admittedly-addled mind of certain of those moments when, although I was not in command nor control of my vessel, it seemed to guide itself in my favor and on my behalf without me being in any condition to do damn near anything about it:   At night, ten miles off the rocky Pacific coast and still twenty miles north of the entrance, through the mile long Golden Gate, to San Francisco Bay:  At dusk, hear Point Reyes and Drake's Bay, the north wind had come honking down on me in my 28 feet long (open!) steel lifeboat and now, an hour after dark, the wind is a steady forty knots, with gusts to fifty; the seas, whose tops (boiling crests) are phosphorescing bigtime; and whose heighths are ranging upwards of maybe twenty feet, at least. The only saving grace was that it was something on the order of 400 feet between these mountains of wavetops being urged along by this fierce north (and off-the-land) wind. In awe and amazement, almost in a state-of-shock, I huddled in the open bow of my boat, under a blanket with a kerosene heater between my legs and watched those waves creep up to within desperate few inches of the top edge (gunnel) of my tiny pathetic excuse for a real boat. They came up and up the sides as my boat rose and rose up the oncoming swell—facing stern on to the oncoming swell—surfing for some many seconds until the crest of foamy swirlings passed underneath us and we slid down the backside to the three-hundred feet calm drifting in the nearly windless hollows—while the wild ass wind is shrieking just above the wavetop line, maybe twenty feet overhead. I've got a tiny triangular flap of a corner of a sail hung on the mast, but it seems mostly just show and very little go, and then got too scary to keep trying to fly as the night intensified. Oh: Did I mention that with the onset of this big north wind, also shortly thereafter brought on a similarly-intense fog, further denying all visuals for the whole damn rest of the night, and I hadn't much clue where I was all night, besides some terribly-fallible ded reckoning on the part of my substantially-subdued, overly-awed brain. All's well that ends well. For with the dawn, came enough lifting of the fog to then become able to zero in on trying to catch the incoming tidal flow free ride right on through the gate and into shelter from this mean old mad mad wind storm that was as close as I've ever come to biting the bullet. Or should that be: meeting Davy Jones? or the seagoddess neices of old man Neptune? Or even his wife, mother, or mother-in-law?  Another case of me reminding myself that I am one lucky son of a bitch, again. Yes: Again. I will try to write further of this soon, but I wanted to focus this attempt at describing some nautical and marine-related things to do with a particular afternoon when I had sailed up (northwest toward the narrowing shallower areas) Richardson Bay and made such good time that I was way too early for to stop nearby the Army Corps dock for to check on what had come in that day. This had me rather lazily swooping in toward dropping anchor in sixteen feet of water about two-hundred feet off (east) from the core's woodpile dock. Approximately two hundred and fifty feet south of where I anchored was a long and very large pier sticking maybe six-hundred feet out into the deeper water of  the fairly narrow deep water ships channel that the Army Corps' large ten-story-tall, four-hundred feet long world war two era Liberty ship that had been converted to a suction-dredge and charged with maintaining adequate depths-of-water in the ships' channels. Every few weeks, the big steel ship, with its monster fifty feet long three feet in diameter suction pipes hanging from amidships by gigantic wire cables and their monster block-and-tackle pulleys for raising and lowering, would come rumbling up our bay to swing around ninety degrees and scootch over to tie up at their six-hundred feet long old but beefy wooden pier; and it was in there, tied up, its locomotive engines slumbering mighty snores way down below, inside. I am also about two-hundred feet away from the giant log breakwaters of a small plastic boat 'yacht' harbor that stick out off from the land maybe two hundred feet or so. Outside of that is open water, albeit somewhat clogged or cluttered (littered?) with anchored out small boats, extending in toward the shore to the gigantic small boat harbor, a few hundred feet further up the bay, and the fuel docks. This small near-shore indent between the three shoreside barriers, wasn't more than a 350 feet wide where I had anchored, and I only had a couple hundred feet of space between me and the big army core debris-removal dock and the giant logs of the nearby small boat harbor. There were probably another half-dozen vessels at anchor within some few dozens of yards. The waterside vista widened out to the east for a mile and more of increasingly-shallowing water to the three mile long rocky lee shore  over on the Tiburon peninsula and Belvedere Island. I only describe this because when I get to the real details of this tale, it is important to be able to visualize all the stuff that could have gone very wrong, even almost tragically wrong when the bleep hit my particular 'fan' that day. Obviously, I am still breathing, so not to worry. * * * Being that the afternoon was mostly on the balmy side and the normal westerlies of our afternoons hadn't materialized, I rather too lackadaisically did not let out as much scope (length) of anchor line as 'the book' says is safe: a seven-to-one ratio of length-of-line to depth-of-water, and laid down in my bunk to actually almost snooze out . . . except for the army core's giant four-hundred feet long ten story tall steel ship with two railroad locomotive engines rumbling a duet down inside its innards with such force as to cause ripples of sympathetic vibrations to gyrate across the surface of the water and trouble my dream. As it happened, while my snooze was materializing, the ship began its ultra slomo departure from its pier; involving its backing out far enough to swing the stern just about right at where I was anchored. My inner being's intuitive 'sense' was warning me to: Wake up, you fool, the ship is getting too near. and when I woke and looked out of the hatch, the ship's eighty feet high stern end loomed high in my field-of-vision barely a hundred feet away! It then throttled forward toward the south and deeper portions of the bay, aiming its bursts of acceler-ating thrusts directly at me snooze.  Never having previously encountered the twin, oppositely-spiraling whirl-pools of the twin screw thrust of a ship's  sixteen feet in diameter propellers, I was fully unprepared for what they were ultimately going to do with my little twenty-two foot home-in-a-sailboat. I awoke, remembering that I hadn't put out enough anchor line to accomadate the kind of turbulence that was assuredly fast approaching my boat and my somewhat still-foggy brain as I leaped up onto deck and hurried forward to start undoing the line at the cleat, which I just got done and wrapped back around the cleat and to hope for the best as the two rapidly- approaching oppositely-rotating hundred feet wide whirlpools enveloped me and us: my boat and I. And then it hit and threw the bow of the boat sideways with such force as to just leave my crouching body out in space over the water, into which I then became immersed. I had managed to grab some sort of a hold on some piece of something that was hanging nearby and cling to at the side of my boat as we took off on a wild ass ride of the three-hundred feet circumference of the first whirlpool, and then did a reverse 360 around the edge of the other large swirling mass of water. As the scene began to calm down and movement slowed, I swam alongside the boat to the bow (bad idea) and proceeded to try to climb up through the bowsprit guy wires, but lost my grip and fell, ker-sploosh, back in. I then swam back to the rear where I was able to use a notch in the rudder to step up onto and over the gunnels and onto my back deck, clothes cascading streams of water. I was already feeling a bit more than just somewhat embarrassed, when the bright and undeniably superiorly-intelligent large black eyes of a very large and very black sleek sea lion—no harbor seal this--surfaced just a millisecond after the top of his head (it might have been a she, but I don't think she sea lions would be quite so boisterous in her ridicule of my antics as mister sea lion was) surfaced not fifteen feet away from me and immediately began bellowing a hearty chorus of guffaws—I have no other way of understanding this—seriously: he was laughing, and laughing directly at me while keeping eye contact for the whole minute before he took a breath and dove; only to surface another 50 feet away for one more lengthy chorus of you idiot fool dummy human, you! I could only agree wholeheartedly with his sentiment at that point; while counting my blessings and thanking my (fig.) lucky stars that nobody's boat smashed into anyone else's or the shore, piers, breakwater logs, or rip rap shore section not that far off, either; and I'd gotten my anchor line untied before taking the tumble. And I had a story worthy of actually telling my grandchildren, someday about the skinny boatdummy and the sleek black, bright-eyed eight-hundred pound laughing sea lion. I have another two or three falling-out-of-boat or off of boat stories but will save them for another day when I have more energy to donate to this increasingly-uncomfortable sedentary sitting and typing business that I have only just re-begun to re-assume after a three year hiatus from all everything to do with attempted computer-generated orchestrations. And, as with any 'new' job regimen, it takes a few weeks to re-acclimatize one's (my) spirit, muscles, nerves, emotions, thinker, and physical body to grow the 'callouses' that allow lengthier sessions stuck in these irritatingly-sedentary poses that come with the writer's 'territory.'
     The hard-to-find, (probably: nowadays) cast steel Danforth “Mark II” style anchor is vastly superior in its quick grip on the (soft) bottom and surer hold fast by far than the stamped steel Danforths so readily and cheaply available everywhere. Them darnn stupid stamped steel ones just bend and otherwise distort when push comes to shove. But, even the tiny five-pounder Mark II I once had—my 'lunch (and kedging) hook'--never let go. My best-ever cast 65 pound “Mark II” held more than fifty tons once in a gale of north wind one January—at least it held until the gusts of wind hit over sixty and it did let go. But I had had the tugboat's Caterpillar idling away by that time as I could just tell that the wind wasn't going to other than intensify that night and when the anchor finally dragged—and that was with nearly three-hundred pounds of chain stretched out!--I just eased the shifter into gear and held her (it was a boy boat: Herbert; built 1919, federal document number 218538) steady as she goes against the terrible gusts that finally began to let up just before the sky began to lighten. Part of any serious boat owner-operator-fixer's survivalist's requirements is that you have more than just one anchor rigged and ready to go for if and when number one lets g. Three's even better. Redundancies, redundancies, redundancy's the name of 'the game.' In fact, I practice the same regimen with my vehicles. I've never owned one newer than 13 years old . . Boy! I am apologizing for having just jumped way all over the map with this communique, but after all, this is Hardway here, and what do you expect? Perfection? Not a chance—70-30 aint too shabby. . .