The Martinsville, VA, Oktoberfest, which would have been tomorrow, is
another casualty of COVID-19. However, vendors who were signed up for
Oktoberfest will be setting up at a series of pared-down events—First Fridays—with the first being tomorrow night (October 1). I'll be there with several
books available—The Monarchs, Blue Devil Island, Young Blood, and my
Ameri-Scares titles
West Virginia: Lair of the Mothman, Michigan: The Dragon of Lake Superior, and
Ohio: Fear the Grassman! The event will
be at the Martinsville Farmers' Market location location (65 W. Main
Street, Martinsville, VA). Come on by from 4:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. on
Friday, October 1, to check us out.
The Editor Known as Mr. Deathrealm. Author of BLUE DEVIL ISLAND, THE NIGHTMARE FRONTIER, THE LEBO COVEN, DARK SHADOWS: DREAMS OF THE DARK (with Elizabeth Massie), BALAK, YOUNG BLOOD (with Mat & Myron Smith), et. al. Feed at your own risk.
Thursday, September 30, 2021
Friday, September 24, 2021
Step Up to Dutch Masters and Smile, Brother, Smile
When I was a young’un, my dad smoked cigarettes for a time, but never once do I
remember him smoking a cigar. Regardless, Dutch Masters cigar boxes were
apparently the preferred household storage container. The one in the photo above
is one of the few surviving examples. Circa 1974, it served as the bank vault
for Japanese Giants, the daikaiju-themed fanzine of my creation (notice the “Mag Money” label scrawled at the top of the
front panel). Later, as you may note from the sticker on the lid, my brother
appropriated the box for his own use, probably nefarious (thankfully, after I
had cleaned out the vault). Once I re-appropriated it, the box became a
repository for letters from other daikaiju film fans, as well as selected love
notes I wrote to prospective girlfriends (which were promptly returned either
unanswered or with accompanying notes of refusal, in varying degrees of
politeness). It is these latter items, which I have saved as souvenirs, that
currently occupy the box.
  Anyway, this particular musing stems from the somewhat belated revelation that,
  for all the cigar boxes in the house, my dad didn’t smoke cigars. Or did he? I
  know a number of his friends did, though it seems unlikely he would have
  acquired their empties for whatever reason. Now, Dad did have a massive
  postage stamp collection, and he even ran his own philatelic business through the 1970s into the 1980s. At one time, I recall there
  being dozens of cigar boxes full of stamps of every nationality and
  denomination stacked in every available household space. Perhaps it was a
  stamp collecting thing. Cigar boxes for stamps. Maybe there was a corresponding market for empty cigar boxes back when. Hell if I know, but if I’m going to lose sleep, which seems to be an inevitability these days, it’s a far better to lose it dwelling on this shit than, for example, the anti-vax idiocy
  I encountered earlier today, which nearly sent me over the edge.
On that note, I’ll
  leave you with this little jewel.
Sunday, September 19, 2021
Whirlwind!
In the couple of weeks since Ms. and I returned from Michigan, the world seems
to be getting heavier and spinning faster — at least for the short term. Several
writing and publishing projects, which I’ll mention only in passing, have
presented themselves to me, and while they’re too good to pass up, they also
require a significant amount of work on my part; time for such niceties has not been in plentiful supply, nor do I see a wealth of it in the near future. Still, I’m hard into one of the projects and
am cobbling together the details for the others. I also have an
Ameri-Scares novel — Georgia: The Haunting of Tate’s Mill —
to get back to... eventually. On top of all that, Ms. B. and I are both selling
properties, which have required significant time and attention. My mom’s estate
business, by rights, should be winding down about now, but complications
involving bureaucratic bullshit are preventing this happening. At least I did
manage to close the door on one detail that’s been waiting in the wings since
the beginning of the estate mess (at least, I think — and hope —
that door is closed). While working at Brugger’s a couple of weeks back, I
managed to wrench or otherwise traumatize my neck and/or spine, which I can only
hope proves to be nothing serious. There’s a little improvement there, but not
as much as it seems there should be by now.
  
    
  
    
  
    
|  | 
| A lovely cache guardian at "Chapel Hill History Lesson" | 
I have, at least, managed to fit in some geocaching, a handful of nice outings
  with Brugger, and a couple of relaxing gatherings with friends. Last weekend,
  the No-Dead-Weight Irregulars — Diefenbaker (a.k.a.
  Scott), Old Rob (a.k.a. Old Rob), and this old dude
  — hit Cary for a lovely day of hiking and caching, culminating in a
  beastly good bison feast at
  Ted’s Montana Grill
  in Durham. Yesterday, Ms. B. and I rode over to
  Chapel Hill, aiming to do a little shopping, wining, and caching. We managed
  to do all three, though — thanks to the football game that locked up every bit
  of parking in town — we couldn’t manage everything we had hoped. Still, we
  procured an excellent lunch at
  The Spotted Dog in Carrboro, which has long been one of our favorite dining
  destinations. Today, the usual suspects, plus
  Fishdownthestair (a.k.a. Natalie) made a short but happy
  day of caching at the
  Rich Fork Nature Preserve in High Point, which included first-to-find honors on a new
  cache, which required some effort, in that the published coordinates were a
  couple of hundred feet off.
  Brugger and I have already worked in a few fright films to kick off the
  Halloween season, which we’re starting marginally early, since much of
  the month of October will be devoted to other necessary activities. So far,
  we’ve put on Indigenous (a so-so
  shocker from 2014), The Thing (2011),
  John Carpenter’s The Thing (1982),
  Night (Curse) of the Demon, Casting the Runes (an entertaining BBC
  production from 1979), The Ninth Gate,
  Black Mountain Side, and probably another
  flick or two I’m not remembering off the top of my head. Fun stuff, naturally.
  We have a few other must-watch movies on the docket.
  And just as an aside here, if you haven’t gotten yourself vaccinated against
  COVID-19, for the love of Yog, do it. If you don’t plan to, unless you’ve got
  some kind of mitigating condition or circumstances, you and your ilk are
  causing more havoc for our healthcare system than is sustainable, and I personally know quite a few healthcare professionals that have absolutely had
  it with you. I am not a healthcare professional, but I can tell you, I’ve had
  it with you too.
And that, as they say, is that.
|   | 
| A dapper Ms. B. on the Bolin Creek Trail in Chapel Hill | 
|   | 
| The old homestead at the Rich Fork Nature Preserve in High Point | 
|   | 
| Natalie and Old Rob look on as Scott tries to stop the brain from leaking out. Not sure it worked, Scott. | 
Monday, September 6, 2021
Whinin' and Cachin' in Midland
 
 
  It was the first plane ride for Ms. B. and me since before the pandemic began.
  We were a couple of early birds on Thursday, September 2 — our flight took off
  at 5:10 a.m., so we were up and at it by 3:30 a.m. Fortunately, from start to
  finish, everyone around us was masked up, as required, and of course, Ms. B.
  and I had our COVID-19 shots a few months back (as did her parents). We headed
  from Greensboro to Flint via Charlotte, on full flights,
  both of which were on time, smooth, and trouble-free.
  We arrived in Midland, MI, early in the afternoon, had some
  lunch, drank coffee, and spent a good portion of the afternoon hanging with
  the parents. Rather than go out geocaching, I stayed in and worked hard to
  complete a short story for an upcoming anthology. Mission accomplished! I feel
  like the story did everything it set out to do, and I hope the editor will
  feel the same. Of course, I will post any news on that front whenever there is
  any news on that front to post. Despite having gotten up well before the
  ass-crack of dawn, we both stayed up to the wee hours watching cooking shows
  on the Food Network, which has become long-standing tradition whenever we're
  in Midland.
  Friday turned out to be quite a productive day, geocaching-wise. I got
  up early and, as has been my custom on the past several visits here, set out
  on the bicycle for big ol' caching run. I found a fair bunch, couldn't find a
  couple of others, and put in seven or eight miles of pedaling.
|   | 
| Do you see the cache? It's right there, in the picture.... | 
Drank coffee.
  After lunch, the lot of us hit the road, headed for Clare, about 30
  miles from Midland, so that Ms. B. and her folks could explore an antique shop
  or two. Naturally, while they did this, I wandered off to hunt caches. I
  discovered Clare's very large, very old graveyard, which was quite lovely —
  one of those graveyards so picturesque they surely take some of the sting out
  of being buried. We had intended to stop at the famous
  Cops 'n' Doughnuts doughnut shop, but it — like most of the rest of the
  little town — was overrun with specimens of the human species, a huge number
  of which were stopping through on their journeys north to the annual Labor Day
  walk across the Mackinac Bridge, which connects Michigan's upper and
  lower peninsulas. So we opted to forgo doughnuts (though I did get to snag a
  cache there). Once our business was concluded in Clare, we moved a few miles
  back eastward to Sanford, a tiny little town that damn near came to an
  end a year or so ago. An incredible amount of rainfall swelled the
  Titabawasee River to unprecedented proportions, which resulted in
  the destruction of two dams and massive flooding in and around Sanford. When
  we visited here last September, we went to Sanford to view the damage
  (see "Midland with a Twist," September 18, 2020). Since then, most of the town has been as restored as restored can be, but
  the river and Sanford Lake are just plain gone, with only marsh and destroyed
  property remaining in their places. The folks found a decent antique mall
  north of town, while I again set out on an enjoyable cache run.
  After a nice dinner with the folks, Ms. B. and I made the pilgrimage to
  Whine!, which is pretty much our regular Midland wine bar — though, rather than
  wine, I decided to give their gin martini a try. I found it pleasing. And, as
  per usual, upon our return we sat up late with the folks watching cooking
  shows. I always wonder why I feel so hungry when I'm here.
|   | 
| A view of the old cemetery in Clare | 
|   | 
| Alleyway art behind Cops 'n' Doughnuts in Clare | 
|   | 
| Big-ass weeping willow, little Ms. B. | 
Drank coffee.
    For dinner, Kimberly and I constructed shrimp tacos, which everyone enjoyed.
    And then it was a quiet, homebody-type evening in front of the TV.
  
  
    Another relatively early-morning bike ride
    got Sunday started for the old geocacher. This one turned
    out to be another long ride with few cache finds, but I did get to spend
    some quality time on the hunt. One — at a picnic shelter at
    Optimist Park
    — was rated high on the difficulty scale, and I never did find the damned
    thing after almost an hour of searching. I'm sure that little fucker is
    there; it's just a really tough hide. I got in a bit of trail riding at
    nearby
    Stratford Woods Park, and at least there, I did find the cache. Drank coffee.
  
  
    After this, Ms. B. and I headed downtown, where we completed an
    Adventure Lab cache that led us to several noteworthy locations
    along Main Street. That was fun, and I also picked up an additional
    cache along the way. During the afternoon, she and her folks went out to
    hunt more antiques, while I stayed home to rest and recuperate after all the
    rigorous pedaling. And I got a bunch of this blog written.
Drank more
    coffee.
  
  
    Come dinnertime, we decided to hit a couple of different downtown
    destinations to split up the courses. We began at
    CafĂ© Zinc — out on the lovely terrace — with a dirty gin martini for the old
    dude (which would have been exemplary but for the non-regulation
    martini glass, which sits poorly with certain of us drink snobs), a
    not-at-all-oaky Chardonnay for the lady (feh), and a shrimp cocktail to
    share (bravissimo). We followed this by trucking ourselves a couple
    of doors down to
    Gratzi, which we had visited once before, a couple of years back. On that
    experience, the food left more than a little to be desired, though the
    drinks were perfection and the service exemplary. This time, I ordered the
    veal Bolognese, and Kimberly went with meatballs with marinara sauce. Hers
    was delicious, mine was good, though not exceptional. As before, the service
    couldn't have been better and the atmosphere there is top-notch. For these,
    we'll give the place a solid thumbs-up.
  
  |   | 
| View of the hidden trail that leads toward Stratford Woods Park | 
|  | 
| Heading for the cache in Stratford Woods | 
|   | 
| Ms. B. in front of "Santa's House" in downtown Midland | 
And that was our long Labor Day weekend Midland trip. Mostly relaxing, with fun caching, bike riding, dining, drinking, and wonderful family time. Drank coffee. The weather was absolutely perfect this time around; I sort of suspect that, on our next trip, it may be cold. Damned cold. Michigan cold.



