Saturday, November 28, 2009

He climbed that too


StevieG, 16, Pyramid of the Sun, Teotihuacan Mexico

The climb


At the age of 16, I took a spring break vacation to Miami Beach Florida with three high school buddies, Jim, Irwin and Barry. We split the bill at a cheap motel on the inner coastal waterway. By day, we hung out at hotel pools along Collins Avenue, and chased girls. At night, we hung out at Big Daddy's Lounge listening to Barry White music, and chased girls. No one bothered to card us, so we drank a few beers.

One afternoon, Jim and I stopped at a construction site next to the Singapore Hotel. A large crane stood dormant and there were no workers around. The steel ball at the top of the crane was level with the 11th story of the Singapore, about 110 feet high. I can't remember who first came up with the idea. We decided to climb the crane that night.

At about 9 PM that evening, we donned our Converse basketball shoes (for a tight grip) and headed for the site. At the bottom of the crane, we looked up, and then at each other, a little nervous. Sure it was dangerous, but the adventure far outweighed the danger or the risk of getting caught.

Like most standard cranes, the bars of the superstructure crossed in an X with a supporting bottom bar, all the way up. After a test climb of 10 feet, we came down and decided that it was no problem. We started to climb. 30 feet up, we paused to rest and look around.

At about 70 feet, we rested again and took in the sights. The warm fragrant wind blew in our faces as we tried to contain our excitement. We had done alot of crazy things in high school, but nothing could quite match this. We pressed on. At 90 feet, the ball at the top was clearly in sight.

Ten minutes later, we reached the top, touched the steel ball and settled into sitting positions. Small points of light dotted the ocean horizon. Collins Avenue traffic stretched north and south for miles as people walked a short distance from the unlit construction site.

We started down twenty minutes later. Methodically, in no rush, we negotiated every steel bar perfectly in a rhythm that kept us together on opposite sides of the superstructure. Pausing again at about the same levels as on the way up, I half-expected the police to be waiting for us at the bottom.

The coast was clear. We scurried down the final 10 feet and hopped off the crane laughing our hearts out. We did it!

Over the years, I have told very few people about the experience. I save it mostly for myself during those times when I need to call on a reserve of pride and strength. A while back, I read somewhere that people rarely look up as they go about their daily business. So true--so true.

Friday, November 27, 2009

Cold hand of justice


Night Hanging, Virtual Tombstone Arizona in Second Life

I'll be your Huckleberry

Trouble in Tombstone Arizona




Three top-level Tombstone public officials are under investigation by the Cochise County Attorney's Office as to whether they have violated Arizona's open meeting laws. Those implicated in the investigation include Mayor Dusty Escapule, City Attorney Randy Bays and City Clerk Brenda Ikirt.
Cochise County Attorney Edward Rheinheimer launched the investigation after receiving a You Tube video (above) from a Sierra Vista Herald journalist, of an Oct. 13 Tombstone City Council meeting. At that time, city officials booted Mike Carrafa, owner of Six Gun City, from the meeting for making “personal attacks” against the mayor and council.
The County Attorney’s Office reviewed the tape and decided to initiate the investigation. Rheinheimer told a reporter that he was disturbed by the way Carrafa was prevented from addressing the council by the city attorney and the mayor in what would seem to have been a completely appropriate manner.

Reprinted from Jeff Hidalgo's November 5, 2009 Tombstone Epitaph article Top Town Officials Under Investigation
Hit link for full article.

Montage

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Utanosuke Playing Go


Print 10-6, Kiseido Publishing; Tokyo, Japan

Oban print by Kunisada (signing as Toyokuni III), published by Tsutaya Kichizo in 1861.
From the series Meigi Sanju-rokkasen (A Selection of Thirty-Six Famous Geisha). The haiku in the panel reads:
With the first move at go
the heat of this evening
is quite forgotten.