05-NOV-A-10

 

DERWOOD FALL WEEKEND AND FIRST REUNION

 WITH THE VETERANS OF “OPERATION LIFELINE”

IN HARFORD COUNTY FARM COUNTRY

AND A FEW RUNS NEAR HOME

 

November 11--13, 2005

 

It is all golden and glorious as the slanting rays of the all too quickly setting sun gild the yellow leaves of Derwood that are raining down on the skylights  through which I am viewing them, with about three times as many already down, many of them blown into corners of the decks and on the drive and walkways.  It is that poignantly brief beautiful time of year called Indian summer in which the morning chill gives way to sixty degree sunny afternoons, with a twilight that comes so soon as four thirty in the early afternoon.

 

   I ran Needwood bike trail on Saturday, passing my neighbor teaching a Magruder band of boys to play rugby, and spotted several deer scurrying along through the same golden leaves I was admiring at Derwood.  I made a plan to run with Joe from which I have just now returned on a late Sunday afternoon, taking off in the splendors of a glorious autumn afternoon and returning in the dark and hour later with one fox and nine deer that crossed in front of us on return in the dim evening—one an eight point buck.  It is time for me to get out and encounter these when armed to fill the three new freezers!  That will come two weeks away, along with a chance to scout out the Sika deer farm for the single Eastern Shore trophy I have still been awaiting.

 

I got a call form Christian Elwell who had invited me up to Upstate New York to go deer hunting next weekend when I am going to be in Iowa.  I had sent him a group of photos of the refurbished Game Room and the elk hunt which he would relate to.  I am preparing the Thanksgiving morning run with Joe at the Turkey Chase 10K, and then going out to the Schaefers in Trappe MD as Craig is looking over a job as surgical hospitalist at Anne Arundel Medical Center.

 

I went two hours form Derwood to Harford County—possibly the first time I have been in this MD county, adjacent to PA and Northwest of Baltimore.  One of our volunteer EMT’s from Harford County has a family farm in Harford County called the Harkin Hill Farm—a huge operation with 350 dairy cows and 280 acres under corn and other silage products for feed.  There are lots of McMansions built all around them, and one adjacent farm, the only other one in their area, but it has just sold off to developers.  This big dairy farm is loaded with out buildings and all the equipment and repairs needed to keep this large operation going.  The family has three sons who want nothing to do with the farming business, but two daughters Jen and Beth who are known (by their license plates) as FarmGirl3 and 2.  They are heavily into the process and Jen is married to a young man who is remodeling the adjacent original house to move into, while Beth the younger has a boyfriend who is getting recruited into the process.

 

  We all got together for a large party of the kind they have often it seems with the swimming pool outside and a fire pit and large porches and crab soup fried chicken and hot mulled cider.  The group was quite interested in the complete collection of my photos all organized in the album along with the reports I had written and many groups went over it all evening.  I talked with some of the people whom I remembered and some I do not recall ever seeing.  They tell me that the Governor’s reception on Tuesday was quite an event and each of us was awarded a citation and another medal and a cd of photos of the experience which should be coming by mail.

 

 Of all the incongruencies, the least effective and most politically bombastic of the docs was also one with a Latino name—the one who could not control his group and was the one when told about he “adopted dog” they chose to call Katrina which was being dognapped by the vacuous young woman who was “rescuing” this well-fed and obviously owned and kept dog, he responded only “It is out of my control.”  But, he was the one involved with the only big thing that happened on his team—the wedding of the young couple with the two kids. It turned out that upon his return, he received a “Presidential Medal”  for “Leading us” through this rescue effort, and made a speech before the collected dignitaries and the unaware President G W Bush saying magnanimously “I will only accept this medal if it is on behalf of my hard working colleagues whom I led in this effort”—when he was the weakest and least effective person of the group but the quickest to make speeches about the wonderful efforts he was making through his trusted more competent colleagues!

 

                        I had listened through the weekend to some desperate phone calls ranging from feisty pre-conditions to total despair and self-loathing breakdown and urgent pleas for help in a serous mental illness with a request for hospitalization.  I will check further into the status of the mood swings

 

            I went to church this morning and stopped by for the run with Joe and stayed for dinner so we could compare plans for the Thanksgiving holiday in which we will all be running the race in the morning before I turn form grad student/teacher to hunter/gatherer for the next week.  I will be busy with more of the same plans until I make a trip to Iowa later this week

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