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Sunday, November 30, 2014
Rosie's Lincoln Place music memories
I found this in an old e-mail--a
wonderful little piece from Metropolitan Diary. Then my parallel experience.
Rosemary
Dear Metropolitan Diary:
After I watched my friend and his
band play at the Bitter End in the West Village, he and some of my friends and
I hopped on the A train to head back home to Brooklyn. The train was packed,
and my friend barely found room for his drums on the floor in front of us.
After a few stops, he began to
softly play a random beat. In a short time, people in the car began tapping
their feet and bobbing their heads.
Then, out of nowhere, a man from farther down the car began singing
“Lean on Me” to the beat of the bongo. It wasn’t long before the entire car
broke into song, clapping on the off-beat and wiggling in their seats.
All strangers...one beat, joined by
the music.
Calling forth this memory 1968.
Living in Brooklyn, we named buildings
near us: the Haitian Building, the Irish Building, the Puerto Rican Building,
Johnnie She’s Building, and Our Building, 339 Lincoln Place. Me on our front
steps, warm summer night. Someone from the Puerto Rican building next door
played a guitar. Another guitarist came outside. A bongo player from Johnnie’s
Building. Another drummer from the Haitian Building. Someone with a horn who
could play only one note but came in appropriately and at the right beat. Many
happy spectators.
Until the racist old white lady on
the fourth floor in Our Building, yelled out her window, “Stop that noise or
I’ll call the police.” They didn’t and she did. They came and ended the music.
But not before the Lincoln Place
block between Underhill and Washington Avenue had a wonderful 35 minutes I’ve
remembered.
Posted by sought after at 8:04 AM
Wednesday, November 26, 2014
Monday, November 24, 2014
frisky squirrels vs bird feeders
Rosemary's experiences with squirrels
Back yard 87
Northampton Street, Buffalo. July 1943—or so. A perfect day. Me under a large
elm tree (long ago killed by Dutch elm disease). A couple of books, a pitcher
of homemade lemonade. (There was no other kind.) And peanuts for me and the
squirrels. You have to understand my lawn chair. The old-fashioned kind with
three intractable positions. You had to get up from the chair to change them. I
chose the most stretched-out position, closest to the ground. A squirrel
appeared and I gradually enticed him with peanuts to take one from my hand. He
ate it and THEN hopped onto ME. He advanced oh...... so............ slowly........
up my supine body. He perched on my chest. HE SNIFFED MY NOSE . He looked RIGHT
INTO MY EYES. I did not breathe. After a glorious, ecstatic ten seconds (for
me, anyway) he turned and scampered down the way he had come. One of the
greatest experiences of my life.
That is the story.
Shall I spoil it by explaining why this was such a transcendent unforgettable
experience. Yes, I will. Being so close, being TRUSTED by a wild creature. Oh the joy of it, the mystery of it. Why did he fearlessly run up my body and look
into my eyes? How many times in the history of the world has this happened?
I saw a video of
squirrels outwitting devices designed to prevent them from raiding bird
feeders. One cost $140 and administered a non-fatal electric shock. They
learned to avoid it by hanging onto another part of the feeder and reaching for
the food. Another bird lover observed the squirrels testing the device until
the batteries went dead.
The most challenging
was a see-saw delicately balanced so that a bird wouldn’t tip it. The weight of
a squirrel would unbalance the seesaw, leaving the food out of reach. No
problem for two squirrels working together. (How did they communicate the
complicated strategy to each other?) They leapt simultaneously onto the two
ends of the seesaw, balancing each other while they cleaned out the bird
feeder. One baffled bird lover said, “A squirrel has a brain the size of a
walnut. We should be able to outwit them.”
Last, a squirrel/cat
story. I fed squirrels from my second story bedroom window. In winter, I would
put out the food and close the window. My cat jumped up on the sill and glared
at the squirrel, who understood what glass is and knew there was no danger,
calmly munching away, glancing occasionally (I thought, with amused contempt)
at my beloved Georgia cat.
Not a squirrel but a
cat story. Ground floor window on Lincoln Pl Brooklyn. Food on sill for
neighborhood homeless cats. One day red cat dining and handsome, sleek, well
fed all-black jumped on sill and tried to drive red cat off. I banged on the
window and yelled. Black cat took off. Red cat resumed lunch. Point of story:
red cat knew I wasn’t banging or yelling at him.
Posted by sought after at 10:49 AM
Saturday, November 22, 2014
Sunday, November 16, 2014
Sunday, November 9, 2014
Saturday, November 8, 2014
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