Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Lost Boys Six

     Roy Blankley is a six generation New York State resident whose great great grandfather was an old time circuit judge. Their family estate is now a museum along twelve mile creek, twelve miles from the mouth of Lake Mento. Google map shows it on the other side of Blankley Road, near a bushy inlet, with no other houses around.
     Roy was born and raised on the lake. The third of five boys, he always played 'catch up' in a birth order that had him as pinned as an insect in a collection of old world has-beens. He has enough money but it is doled out as a trust so often is and so, even though he does not have to work, his deep unhappiness with his life keeps him an unmarried hermit wearing his father's old clothes and neglecting upkeep of another historic house his parents had left him. He seldom bathed or washed his hair but he figured the creek kept him clean enough. Over the years Roy becomes a more than proficient fishing and gaming guide.
He has a diving license and can fix any broken down motor the marina at the mouth of twelve mile creek calls him about. He even welds underwater.
On the weekends Roy meets with a militia group who 'murder' each other with paint balls and all the other Para-military games 'Lost Boys' on this side of the lake like to play.
Every year, he and three others circumnavigate Mento and its fellow lakes in a yacht race. The cup is to boat racing what the World Series is to baseball and what the Daytona 500 is to NASCAR. With the Gold Cup in his grasp, for the ninth time Roy hoped for better competition every year.
     The Lake Mento 300 yacht race course is a circumnavigation of the lake that starts at Port Debit Yacht Club, heads east and rounds goose Island, then heads south to Oslego NY where it turns east along the south shore to the Giagara River mark before heading to the finish line at Port Debit Yacht Club. The race is a test of preparation, teamwork, navigation and perseverance.
'Captain Roy Boy' leads the three man team to victory every year. The family marina made good from these wins in boat sales, docking, slip rentals, engine repairs, supply sales, launching and hoisting fees.
Blankley Bay Marina, located on beautiful downtown Blankley Bay.
     Roy figured the authorities wouldn't start searching until dawn. It was four thirty a.m. Re-starting the Zeppelin he quietly pulled the Boston Whaler into Blankley Bay and up twelve mile creek toward the circuit judge's historic home. He had played, swam, fished, and guided on the creek all his life.
Finding the sheltered cove near the road where he had left his truck several hours later, he debark the Zeppelin, deflated it and stuffed it on the truck. He would leave the other boat and deal with it later.
     Any idea how little changes over two hundred years in a small town? But to make a smaller list, at least one descendant of the first four hundred to settle stays, even if it is a distant cousin. Roy Blankley was a hanger on. In this vein he kept to himself, kept the peace, and was semi-productive. Other cousins, and co-owners of the old family marina tried bossing him but Roy's engine repair expertise kept them at bay and when he took any boat he wished on a 'test drive' upon Lake Mento, which he did quite regularly, they could say nothing.
Heading due south, he arrived in Canada after a twenty minute speed ride, at his family’s twin marina in Bassering Ontario, only fifty miles away. Everyone was in a tizzy and no co-owner wants to witness during a spot check: missing boats, wrecked boats, irate customers, suicidal managers. And then it occurred to him. This was something he could do alone could completely fix with no one the wiser. If years of Para-military exercises had taught him anything it was, “Don’t Tread on Me".
                                     ~
    
     Bobbie and I shoplifted lunch five days a week at the local grocery store.
You'd be surprised how easy it is. Sometimes a customer sees, but we just open boxes and gobble.
Back at school we smoke stolen cigarettes at the spot there, off property while waiting for the bell, and the other four of us.
Once you are sixteen nobody chases you down if you are absent. The other four are sixteen but still hang around for the shop classes with friends from public school.
Jeremy, Jason, Mattie and Dave pulled up to the smoking stop just off school property, in Dave's mother's shit-box Chevy. He had dropped her off at work. Piling in, we head for this night's party spot, Emily's house.
     A little spliff is being passed and the joint and laughter are directed toward Mattie who swears he will bring us Emma Lou Finlay's panties from her clothes line by next week at this time. By this time next week we are all human Popsicles near the bottom of Lake Mento.                Eight hundred feet is fairly deep for a lake, even one dug out by a glacier like Mento was. It's cold all year around and it's very narrow, only fifty miles across. A very angry glacier, and in a big hurry, had gouged out our water play world. About the only thing I learned in geography class is that glaciers do what they want, where they want, when they want, kind of like the Boys Six. We are no match for this situation but we don't know it just yet.  Pulling up at the marina after Emily's party, it seems to me, we were not any more high and drunk than any other Saturday night.
     A speedboat with keys and a full tank does not look like a 'set up', at the time. Naivety is a stupid reason to die. How long can we expect owners of millions of dollars of yachts to put up with the antics of six little ass holes, like us?
                                     ~
     It might seem irrational for a seventeen year old to be caught up in the mess like this turns out to be. Fifteen years down here has gives a person some maturity, perspective and insight. The guy in the camouflage blow-up was the second part of the 'set up'. Putt putting along, we waits for the Whaler motor to cut out and then makes his move.
"Ahoy, 'sup?" His face is streaked black and his jumpsuit matches his boat colour. "Dude we're dead in the water here, we don't think its gas though:"  'Dead in the water indeed'. 
     Dude says that he is part of coast guard practise manoeuvres that haven't started yet. He would be happy to tow us back but the blow-up motorboat's outboard cannot handle that much weight drag. Can we all pile on the paddle boat that we are pulling behind us? Since a couple of us are wet, he will get the Boston Whaler after dropping us back at the marina. We cannot believe our luck. He tosses six life jackets and we hop on the paddle boat.
                                        ~
     Roy Blankley is a six generation New York State resident whose great great grandfather was an old time circuit judge. Their family estate, now a museum, sits along twelve mile creek, twelve miles from the mouth of Lake Mento. Google map shows it on the other side of Blankley Road, near a bushy inlet, with no other houses around.
     Roy was born and raised on the lake. The third of five boys, he always played 'catch up' in a birth order that had him as pinned as an insect in a collection of old world has-beens. He has enough money but it is doled out as a trust so often is and so, even though he does not have to work, his deep unhappiness with his life keeps him an unmarried hermit wearing his father's old clothes and neglecting upkeep of another historic house his parents had left him. He seldom bathed or washed his hair but he figured the creek kept him clean enough. Over the years Roy becomes a more than proficient fishing and gaming guide.  He has a diving license and can fix any broken down motor the marina at the mouth of twelve mile creek calls him about. He even welds underwater.
     On the weekends Roy meets with a militia group who 'murder' each other with paint balls and all the other Para-military games 'Lost Boys' on this side of the lake like to play.
Every year, he and three others circumnavigate Mento and its fellow lakes in a yacht race. The cup is to boat racing what the World Series is to baseball and what the Daytona 500 is to NASCAR. With the Gold Cup in his grasp, for the ninth time Roy hoped for better competition every year.
The Lake Mento 300 yacht race course is a circumnavigation of the lake that starts at Port Debt Yacht Club, heads east and rounds goose Island, then heads south to Oslego NY where it turns east along the south shore to the Giagara River mark before heading to the finish line at Port Debit Yacht Club. The race is a test of preparation, teamwork, navigation and perseverance.   'Captain Roy Boy' leads the three man team to victory every year. The family marina made good from these wins in boat sales, docking, slip rentals, engine repairs, and supply sales, launching and hoisting fees.

     Jason just got back from four days on observation at the local psych hospital, something about suicide. He said it wasn't bad there.  They even had a school. It was short term because Jay isn't nuts or anything like that. Some girl ditched him. It was all too much for him I guess.  Next time he thinks about killing himself he'll keep it to himself.  Jason arrived at the Loony Bin with a full and perfect Mohawk hair style. He used soap from the washroom to make it stick up way high, spending hours in front of public washroom mirrors.  Noticing that there was only one hair out of place, the treatment school teacher told him it was, "absolutely perfect", anyway. This observation by her seemed to set him at ease and relax him. Some days later he disclosed to this teacher that he had been sexually abused since he was six, by his natural mother. Telling her in a low voice, a calm delivery, it was easy for her to not react to this unexpected pronouncement during a math assignment. Professionals at the observation unit meet every morning and so she was obligated to share this with the team. Neglect and abuse are the order of the day in the adolescent unit, disclosing it to a teacher is rare, at any facility.
     But this teacher knew Jason.   as A student in her behaviour class, at a local school, a couple of years ago, as a student in a behaviour class, Jason distinguished himself by bullying others, insolence and swagger.  He met me in this class. Academically more advanced, I was even more able to waste my time and the time of others and still pass. We could hardly wait to quit at sixteen, and we both did.
Jason's demons were bubbling just under the surface and his temper was legendary. In spite of despising his mother, he would defend her to the death if anyone said, "your mother". This contradiction drove him even more 'crazy' and after the Sycamore chic dumped him, he finally cracked and drove off the pier in the next port town. Pretty bumped up, he survived only to go on to two weeks observation for the stupidity of leaving his seat belt on during his ‘death’ plunge.
     They say suicide attempts are just temper tantrums.   Thanks Dr. Phil and Oz and Opera, for all the insight.
     Bobbie and I shoplifted lunch five days a week at the local grocery store.
You'd be surprised how easy it is. Sometimes a customer sees, but we just open boxes and gobble.
Back at school we smoke cigs we stole from our parents at the spot there off property while waiting for the bell and the other four of us.
Once you are sixteen nobody chases you down if you are absent. The other four are sixteen but still hang around for the shop classes with friends from public school.
     Jeremy, Jason, Mattie and Dave pulled up to the smoking stop just off school property, in Dave's mother's shit-box Chevy. He had dropped her off at work. Piling in, we head for this night's party spot, Emily's house. A little splif is being passed and the joint and laughter are directed toward Mattie who swears he will bring us Emma Lou Finlay's panties from her clothes line by next week at this time. By this time next week we are all human Popsicles near the bottom of Lake Mento.
     The older jokes among the six of us is always how I, "always flunk recess," and Jason, "can't even kill himself right." HA.HA.   Lots of noogies and 'Indian' burns follow all of this. Davey and Mattie, as the youngest, got the worst of our rough stuff.  After Jason was released with some medication, we swallowed them all together that night with a bottle of 'Jack' Bobbie stole. That was the night of the March seventeenth, 1995.
     Bobbie is even more of a realist than me. He points out seagulls eating last night’s party barf, on an otherwise perfect day. No matter how many of us gasp and complain about his grossness, we always look and spoil our appetites. Then he laughs and doubles over and gets another kind of gut ache than ours, but a gut ache just the same. Bobbie's mother is raising him alone and buys the 'fifty percent off' food in order to get them both fed.
Even shoplifted fresh food, was smelled by Bobbie for rotten bits. Old habits die hard.
    Always the kind of kid who noticed the cockroach on the wall of the provincial museum on the school trip, of course I yell, "COCKROACH!" The rest is better than watching a food fight or Ultimate Fight Club.  When confronted in the Principal's office I insist, "but there was a cockroach!"  While being lectured about the meaning of the word, ‘discretion', my eyes involuntarily roll back in my head. Administrators consider that type of, ‘rolling the eye movement as, ‘attitude', then things go haywire. In school suspensions are routine. That means you get to stay inside at recess but in the office area so the teacher can still have a break. On account of there being so many jerks, I hate recess anyway. My social skills are not the best.  Recess always ends with me in trouble everyday anyhow so it's, 'six of one, half dozen of the other', as for what is going on.

     Eight hundred feet is fairly deep for a lake, even one dug out by a glacier like Mento was. It's cold all year around and it's very narrow, only fifty miles across. A very angry glacier, and in a big hurry, had gouged out our water play world. About the only thing I learned in geography class is that glaciers do what they want, where they want, when they want, kind of like the Boys Six. The lake is primarily a result of glacial activity between one million and ten thousand years ago. The last glacier receded approximately twelve thousand years ago.
     Pulling up at the marina after Emily's party, it seems to me, we were not any more high and drunk than any other night.  A speedboat with keys and a full tank does not look like a 'set up', at the time. Naivety is a stupid reason to die. How long can we expect owners of millions of dollars of yachts to put up with the antics of six little assholes, like us?
    Dave misses Canada more than the rest of us. One evening, at dusk, he could just make out the CN Tower and a few of the Bay Street skyscrapers. The lake was black as usually but the sky was blood orange. The towers popped on the horizon. Davey popped up too. The lid of his barrel started to peel away, from decomposition gas. Pressed down as it was, over a decade, it cracked and surrendered to the frigid lake. Dave was in a pickle there. Parts of Davey started on their freedom ride to Canada. Roy boy would not be pleased. He had spent a lot of time making sure that sort of thing never happen.

We don't feel much of anything down here. We have our memories. The lake, being deep has a tide, not an ocean tide but a pull just the same; makes me remember rocking with grandma while mom worked. Rocking in the wicker chair, completed by a song, "Raindrops Keep Falling On my Head," or "You Are the Sunshine of My Life." She doesn't know all the words and hums the  spots that are blank.  To the creaking wicker and the humming grandma led me to sleep until mom came in her own beat up Chevy to get me just around midnight, after every shift.
     Yes, Davey misses Canada and we are starting to pine for Davey. As parts of him float, on their freedom ride home to Canada, at home rumour and innuendo about our disappearance have stopped. Parents have turned against each other. Peers have started jobs and families. But Davey wafts his way home. And they might have made it too, except for the fish.
     Not to a fish, but to any other creature on earth, an innocuous looking strand of something or other, winding its way to the water surface, promises nothing bigger to come.  But to our Walleye following the trail to its source, a dark circle is lodged against a rock oozing with slime near the bottom of Lake Mento, reaps him reward.
     One push confirmed his mother-load. More of the same food leaked from every probe. Quite a cache, but how to hoard it? A feeding frenzy would never do, smart fish, Walleye Pike. He crashed to the surface and swam off.  Every evening, upon returning, the location of his evening snack was secure and known only to him.  Davey's Gravy: and all of it his. For what seemed like a long time, to a fish anyhow, he supped on and on, dining alone. Hannibal Lector eats his heart out."
     Not to a fish, but to any other creature on earth, an innocuous looking strand of something or other, winding its way to the water surface, would promise nothing bigger to come but Walleye follows the trail to its source, a dark circle lodging against a slimy rock near the bottom of Lake Mento. One push confirms his mother lode of a find. More of the same food leaks with his every probe. Quite a cache, but how to hoard it? A feeding frenzy would never do. Smart fish, a Walleye Pike. He crashes to the surface and swims off.
     Every evening, upon returning, the location of his evening snack was secure and known only to him. All this Davey's Gravy for Mr. Walleye Pike.!  For, what seemed like a long time, to a fish anyhow, and he supped on and on; dining alone.
     At home the rumour and innuendo about our disappearance had stopped. Parents had turned against each other. Peers had started jobs and families. And Davey's bits and bites wafted their way home. And they might have made it too except for the fish. A Muskie here, a Pike there is wolfing down his Davey’s and bites.

Sunday, December 12, 2010

<a href="http://www.wordle.net/show/wrdl/2873210/Lost_Boys_Six" 
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Jason At the Loony Bin cont'd

      The older jokes among the six of us is always how I, "always flunk recess," and Jason, "can't even kill himself right."   HA.HA.
Lots of  noogies and 'Indian' burns follow all of this.  Davey and Matty, as the youngest, got the worst of our rough stuff.
     After Jason was released with some medication, we took it all together that night with a bottle of  'Jack'  Bobbie stole.   That was the night of the March seventeenth, 1995. 

Saturday, December 11, 2010

Jason At the Loony Bin

     Jason arrived with a full and perfect Mohawk hair style.  He used soap from the washroom to make it stick up way high.  Noticing that their was only one hair not in place, the treatment school, teacher told him it was, "absolutely perfect", anyway.  This observation by her seemed to set him at ease and relax him.   Some days later he disclosed to this  teacher that he had been sexually abused since he was six, by his natural mother.  Telling her in a low voice, a calm delivery, it was easy for her to not react to this unexpected pronouncemant during a math assignment.  Professionals at the observation unit met every morning and so she was obligated to share this.  Neglect and abuse are the order of the day in the adolescent unit,  disclosing it to a teacher is rare, at any facility.
But this teacher new Jason.  A student in her behavior class, at a local school, a couple of years ago, Jason distiguished himself with bullying others, insolence and swagger.
     He met me in this class.  Academically more advanced, I was even more able to waste my time and the time of others and still pass.  We could hardly wait to quit and we both did.
      Jason's demons were bubbling just under the surface and his temper was legendary.  Inspite of dispising his mother, he would defend her to the death if anyone said, "your mother".   This contradiction drove him even more 'crazy' and after the Seamore chic dumped him he finally cracked and drove off the pier in the next port town.  Pretty bumped up, he survived and go two weeks observation for his stupidity.

Friday, December 10, 2010

Bobbie

 Bobbie?... even more of a realist than me.  He points out seagulls eating last nights party barf, on an otherwise perfect day.   No matter how many of us gasp and complain about his 'Gross'-ness, we always look and spoil our appetites. Then he laughs and doubles over and gets another kind of gut ache than ours, but a gut ache just the same.   Bobbie's mother is raising him alone and buy the 'fifty percent off' food in order to get them both fed.
Even shiplifted fresh food,  was smelled for rotten bits.  Old habits die hard. 

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Lost Boys Six



 
        James Cameron isn't likely to submerge himself for us, eight hundred feet down in plastic barrels. Fifteen years can get you a lot of crud and algae. Mr. Titanic, I'd love to see on this, the flip-side of my my short life. (My name is James too.) But I'm not the most sympathetic member of the barrel crew down here.
     Bad ass"? My middle name.  Leading the "Lost Boys Six"?  My pleasure. On about March 17, 1996, we stole a boat from the local marina, as per usual and took our weekly joy ride.  This boat,that night, was begging to be stolen.  Keys in the ignition, gas metre reading full, on we jump.  Except for Matty and Jeremy, the youngest of us.  Four on the Whaler and those two on a stupid paddle wheeler that they had found beached next to the speed boat. 
     We left the bay area and headed into the lake.  The paddle boat finally arrived in the lake but it was rough and they begged us to pick them up.  We let them tough it out and get wet first, for being so stupid in the first place.
     Jason cranked the speed even though I was  steering. With two hundred and fifty horses under us, the rest of them flew backwards into a pile.  No one steering now, the Boston Whaler did a couple of donuts before stalling out.
      Gas metre read still full but the boat would not start.  The  wet ones of us were shivering and we decided to head back when the engine started. But it doesn't start.  The lights from the harbour were still in sight and so was a smaller light moving steadily toward us.  It was a camouflage blow-up type boat, like the ones that chase other whalers, the ones from japan, in the ocean, killing giant mammals from the sea.  We six  mammals, were about to join them but we don't know it yet.
    
                                  ~       
     Jason just got back from four days on observation at the local psych hospital.  Something about suicide.  He said it wasn't bad there.
They even had a school.   It was short term because Jay isn't nuts or anything like that.  Some girl ditched him is all.  It was all to much for him I guess.
Next time he thinks about killing himself he'll keep it to himself.
     Bobbie and I shoplifted lunch five days a week at the local grocery store.
You'd be surprised how easy it is.  Sometimes a customer sees, but we just open boxes and gobble.
      Back at school we smoke stolen cigarettes  at the spot there, off property while waiting for the bell, and the other four of us. 
     Once you are sixteen nobody chases you down if you are absent.  The other four are sixteen but still hang around for the shop classes with friends from public school.
    Jeremy, Jason, Matty and Dave pulled up to the smoking stop just off school property, in Dave's mother's shit-box Chevy.  He had dropped her off at work.  Piling in, we head for this night's party spot, Emily's house. 
      A little spliff is being passed and the joint and laughter are directed toward Matty who swears he will bring us Emma Lou Finlay's panties from her clothes line by next week at this time.  By this time next week we are all human Popsicles near the bottom of Lake Mento.
                                ~
     Eight hundred feet is fairly deep for a lake,  even one dug out by a glacier like Mento was.  It's cold all year around and it's very narrow, only fifty miles across.  A very angry glacier, and in a big hurry, had gouged out our water play world.  About the only thing I learn ed in geography class is that glaciers do what they want, where they want, when they want, kind of like the Boys Six.  We are no match for this situation but we don't know it just yet.
Pulling up at the marina after Emily's party, it seems to me, we were not any more high and drunk than any other Saturday night. 
     A speedboat with keys and a full tank does not look like a 'set up', at the time. Naivety is a stupid reason to die.  How long can we expect owners of millions of dollars of yachts to put up with the antics of six little ass holes, like us?
                                          ~
     It might seem irrational for a seventeen year old to be caught up in the mess like this turns out to be.  Fifteen years down here has gives a person some maturity, perspective and insight.  The guy in the camouflage blow-up was the second part of the 'set up'.   Putt putting along, we waits for the Whaler motor to cut out and then makes his move.  
     "Ahoy, 'sup?"  His face is streaked black and his jumpsuit match his boat colour.  "Dude we're dead in the water here, we don't think it's gas though."
'Dead in the water indeed'. 
     Dude says that he is part of coast guard practise manoeuvres that haven't started yet.  He would be happy to tow us back but the blow-up motorboat's outboard cannot handle that much weight drag.  Can we all pile on the paddle boat that we are pulling behind us?  Since a couple of us are wet, he will get the Boston Whaler after dropping us back at the marina. We cannot believe our luck.  He tosses six life jackets and we hop on the paddle boat.
                                ~
     Roy Bonisteel is a six generation New York State resident whose great great grandfather was an old time circuit judge.   Their family estate is now a museum along twelve mile creek, twelve miles from the mouth of Lake Mento.  Google map shows it on the other side of Bonisteel Road, near a bushy inlet, with no other houses around. 
     Roy was born and raised on the lake.  The third of five boys, he always played 'catch up' in a birth order that had him as pinned as as an insect in a collection of old world has-beens.  He has enough money but it is doled out as a trust so often is and so, even though he does not have to work, his deep unhappiness with his life keeps him an unmarried hermit wearing his father's old clothes and neglecting upkeep of another historic house his parents had left him.  He seldom bathed or washed his hair but he figured the creek kept him clean enough.  Over the years Roy becomes a more than proficient fishing and gaming guide.
He has a diving license and can fix any broken down motor the marina at the mouth of twelve mile creek calls him about.  He even welds underwater.
     On the weekends Roy meets with a militia group who 'murder' each other with paint balls and all the other para-military games 'Lost Boys' on this side of the lake like to play.
     Every year, he and three others circumnavigate Mento and it's fellow lakes in a yacht race.  The cup is to boat racing what the World Series is to baseball and what the Daytona 500 is to NASCAR. With the Gold Cup in his grasp, for the ninth time Roy hoped for better competition every year.
     The Lake Mento 300 yacht race course is a circumnavigation of the lake that starts at Port Debt Yacht Club, heads east and rounds goose Island, then heads south to Oslego NY where it turns east along the south shore to the Giagara River mark before heading to the finish line at Port Debit Yacht Club. The race is a test of preparation, teamwork, navigation and perseverance.
'Captain Roy Boy' leads the three man team to victory every year.  The family marina made good from these wins in boat sales, docking, slip rentals, engine repairs,supply sales,launching and hoisting fees.  
                                      ~
     Bonisteel Bay Marina, located on beautiful downtown Bonisteel Bay
    Any idea how little changes over two hundred years in a small town?  But to make a smaller list, at least one descendant of the first four hundred to settle stays, even if it is a distant cousin.  Roy Bonisteel was a hanger on.  In this vein he kept to himself, kept the peace, and was semi-productive.  Other cousins, and co-owners of the old family marina tried bossing him but Roy's engine repair expertise kept them at bay and when he took any boat he wished on a 'test drive' upon Lake Mento, which he did quite regularly, they could say nothing.  
      Heading due south, he arrived in Canada after a twenty minute speed ride, at his families twin marina in Bassering Ontario, only fifty miles away.  Everyone was in a tizzy and no what a co-owner wants to witness during a spot check.  Missing boats, wrecked boats, irate customers, suicidal managers.
     And then it occurred to him.  This was something he alone could completely fix.  If years of para-military exercises had taught him anything it was,"Don't Tread On Me".
   Davey misses Canada and we are starting to miss Davey.  Parts of him float as a rumour does, on their freedom ride to Canada. 
      At home the rumour and ineuendo about our diappearence had stopped.  Parents had turned against each other.  Peers had started jobs and families.   And Davey's bits and bites wafted their way home.  And they might have made it too except for the fish.  A Muskie here, a Pike there, wolfing down his bits and bites.
                                   ~
 
  Not to a fish, but to any other creature on earth, an innocuous looking strand of something or other, winding it's way to the water surface, would promise nothing bigger to come but Walleye follows the trail to it's source, a dark circle lodging against a slimy rock near the bottom of Lake Mento. 
     One push confirms his motherload of a find.  More of the same food leaks with his every probe.  Quite a cache.  But how to hoard it?  A feeding frenzy would never do. Smart fish Walleye Pike.  He crashed to the surface and swam off.
Every evening, upon returning, the locaton of his evening snack was secure and known only to him.   Davey's Gravy,  and all his.  For, what seemed like a long time, to a fish anyhow, he supped on and on, dining alone.  Hannibal Lector eat your heart out.
                                                   ~
   Always the kind who noticed the cockroach on the wall of the provincial museum on the school trip, of course I yell, "COCKROACH!"  The rest is better than watching a food fight or  Ultimate Fight Club.
When confronted in the Principal's office I insist, "but there was a cockroach!"
While being lectured about the meaning of the word,'discretion', my eyes involuntarily roll back in my head.  Administrators consider that type of,'rolling the eye movement as,'attitude', then things go haywire.  In school suspensions are routine.  That means you get to stay inside at recess but in the office area so the teacher can still have a break. On account of there being so many jerks, I hate recess anyway.  My social skills are not the best.
Recess ends with me in trouble everyday anyhow so it's, 'six of one, half dozen of the other', as for what is going on.
   

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Bonisteel Harbour, New York State

Bonisteel Harbour, New York State

Bonisteel Harbour, New York State

Bonisteel Harbour, New York State

Bonisteel Harbour, New York State

Bonisteel Harbour, New York State

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Lost Boys Six

Lost Boys Six: "Tuesday, December 7, 2010~
Not to a fish, but to any other creature on earth, an innocuous looking strand of something or other, wound it's way to the water surface. With the promise of something bigger to come, Walleye followed the trail to it's source,
a dark circle lodge against a slimy rock near the bottom of Lake Mento.
One push confirmed his mother-load. More of the same food leaked from every probe. Quite a cache. But how to hoard it? A feeding frenzy would never do. Smart fish Walleye Pike. He crashed to the surface and swam off.
Every evening, upon returning, the locaton of his evening snack was secure and known only to him. Davey's Gravy. And all his. For, what seemed like a long time, to a fish anyhow, he supped on and on, dining alone. Hannibal Lector eat your heart out."

Rogers !-- elseif -->BT Yahoo! Notepad - cymcyn@rogers.com

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Not to a fish, but to any other creature on earth, an innocuous looking strand of something or other, wound it's way to the water surface. With the promise of something bigger to come, Walleye followed the trail to it's source,

Not to a fish, but to any other creature on earth, an innocuous looking strand of something or other, wound it's way to the water surface. With the promise of something bigger to come, Walleye followed the trail to it's source,

Monday, December 6, 2010

lost boys six: Preview "Lost Boys Six"

lost boys six: Preview "Lost Boys Six"

Lost Boys Six

        James Cameron isn't likely to submerged himself for us. eight hundred feet down in plastic barrels for fifteen years can get you too much crud and algae. Mr. Titanic, I'd love to see on this, the flip-side of my my short life. My name is James too. But I'm not the most sympathetic member of the barrel crew down here.
     Bad ass"? My middle name.  Leading the "Lost Boys Six"?  My pleasure. On about March 17, 1996, we stole a boat from the local marina, as per usual and took our weekly joy ride.  This boat,that night, was begging to be stolen.  Keys in the ignition, gas metre reading full, on we jump.  Except for Matty and Jeremy, the youngest of us.  Four on the Whaler and those two on a stupid paddle wheeler that they had found beached next to the speed boat. 
     We left the bay area and headed into the lake.  The paddle boat finally arrived in the lake but it was rough and they begged us to pick them up.  We let them tough it out and get wet first, for being so stupid in the first place.
     Jason cranked the speed even though I was  steering. With two hundred and fifty horses under us, the rest of them flew backwards into a pile.  No one steering now, the Boston Whaler did a couple of donuts before stalling out.
      Gas metre read still full but the boat would not start.  The  wet ones of us were shivering and we decided to head back when the engine started. But it doesn't start.  The lights from the harbour were still in sight and so was a smaller light moving steadily toward us.  It was a camouflage blow-up type boat, like the ones that chase other whalers, the ones from japan, in the ocean, killing giant mammals from the sea.  We six  mammals, were about to join them but we don't know it yet.
    
                                  ~       
     Jason just got back from four days on observation at the local psych hospital.  Something about suicide.  He said it wasn't bad there.
They even had a school.   It was short term because Jay isn't nuts or anything like that.  Some girl ditched him is all.  It was all to much for him I guess.
Next time he thinks about killing himself he'll keep it to himself.
     Bobbie and I shoplifted lunch five days a week at the local grocery store.
You'd be surprised how easy it is.  Sometimes a customer sees, but we just open boxes and gobble.
      Back at school we smoke cigs we stole from our parents at the spot there off property while waiting for the bell and the other four of us. 
     Once you are sixteen nobody chases you down if you are absent.  The other four are sixteen but still hang around for the shop classes with friends from public school.
    Jeremy, Jason, Matty and Dave pulled up to the smoking stop just off school property, in Dave's mother's shit-box Chevy.  He had dropped her off at work.  Piling in, we head for this night's party spot, Emily's house. 
      A little splif is being passed and the joint and laughter are directed toward Matty who swears he will bring us Emma Lou Finlay's panties from her clothes line by next week at this time.  By this time next week we are all human Popsicles near the bottom of Lake Mento.
                                ~
     Eight hundred feet is fairly deep for a lake,  even one dug out by a glacier like Mento was.  It's cold all year around and it's very narrow, only fifty miles across.  A very angry glacier, and in a big hurry, had gouged out our water play world.  About the only thing I learned in geography class is that glaciers do what they want, where they want, when they want, kind of like the Boys Six.  We are no match for this situation but we don't know it just yet.
     Pulling up at the marina after Emily's party, it seems to me, we were not any more high and drunk than any other Saturday night. 
     A speedboat with keys and a full tank does not look like a 'set up', at the time. Naivety is a stupid reason to die.  How long can we expect owners of millions of dollars of yachts to put up with the antics of six little assholes, like us?
                                          ~
     It might seem irrational for a seventeen year old to be caught up in the mess like this turns out to be.  Fifteen years down here has gives a person some maturity, perspective and insight.  The guy in the camouflage blow-up was the second part of the 'set up'.   Putt putting along, we waits for the Whaler motor to cut out and then makes his move.  
     "Ahoy, 'sup?"  His face is streaked black and his jumpsuit match his boat colour.  "Dude we're dead in the water here, we don't think it's gas though."
'Dead in the water indeed'. 
     Dude says that he is part of coast guard practice maneuvers that haven't started yet.  He would be happy to tow us back but the blow-up motorboat's outboard cannot handle that much weight drag.  Can we all pile on the paddle boat that we are pulling behind us?  Since a couple of us are wet, he will get the Boston Whaler after dropping us back at the marina. We cannot believe our luck.  He tosses six life jackets and we hop on the paddle boat.
                                ~
     Roy Bonisteel is a six generation New York State resident whose great great grandfather was an old time circuit judge.   Their family estate is now a museum along twelve mile creek, twelve miles from the mouth of Lake Mento.  Google map shows it on the other side of Bonisteel Road, near a bushy inlet, with no other houses around. 
     Roy was born and raised on the lake.  The third of five boys, he always played 'catch up' in a birth order that had him as pinned as as an insect in a collection of old world has-beens.  He has enough money but it is doled out as a trust so often is and so, even though he does not have to work, his deep unhappiness with his life keeps him an unmarried hermit wearing his father's old clothes and neglecting upkeep of another historic house his parents had left him.  He seldom bathed or washed his hair but he figured the creek kept him clean enough.  Over the years Roy becomes a more than proficient fishing and gaming guide.
He has a diving license and can fix any broken down motor the marina at the mouth of twelve mile creek calls him about.  He even welds underwater.
     On the weekends Roy meets with a militia group who 'murder' each other with paint balls and all the other para-military games 'Lost Boys' on this side of the lake like to play.
     Every year, he and three others circumnavigate Mento and it's fellow lakes in a yacht race.  The cup is to boat racing what the World Series is to baseball and what the Daytona 500 is to NASCAR. With the Gold Cup in his grasp, for the ninth time Roy hoped for better competition every year.
     The Lake Mento 300 yacht race course is a circumnavigation of the lake that starts at Port Debt Yacht Club, heads east and rounds goose Island, then heads south to Oslego NY where it turns east along the south shore to the Giagara River mark before heading to the finish line at Port Debit Yacht Club. The race is a test of preparation, teamwork, navigation and perseverance.
'Captain Roy Boy' leads the three man team to victory every year.  The family marina made good from these wins in boat sales, docking, slip rentals, engine repairs,supply sales,launching and hoisting fees. 
     Bonisteel Bay Marina, located on beautiful downtown Bonisteel Bay.


                                                                     ~
We don't feel much of anything down here.  The lake,being deep has, a tide, not an ocean tide but a pull just the same.  Makes me remember rocking with grandma while mom worked.  Rocking in the wicker chair, completed by a song, "Raindrops Keep Falling On my Head," or "You Are The Sunshine Of My Life."  She doesn't know all the words and hums the blank spots.
To the creaking wicker and the humming grandma led me to sleep until mom came in her own beat up Chevy to get me me just around midnight, after every shift.
      Dave misses Canada more than the rest of us. One evening, at dusk, he could just make out the CN Tower and a few of the Bay Street skyscrapers.  The lake was black as usually but the sky was blood orange.  The towers popped on the our horizon.  Davey popped up too.  The lid of his barrel started to peel away, from decomposition gas.  Pressed down as it was, over a decade, it cracked and surrendered to the frigid lake.  Dave was in a pickle there. Parts of Davey started on their freedom ride to Canada.  Roy boy would not be pleased.  He had spent a lot of time making sure that sort if thing never happen.

                               


                                                                            ~
    


     Once we boarded the paddle boat Roy looped the towing rope around us and shifted the direction of the blow-up.   After settling into a reasonable speed, the six of us felt polar but subdued and sober. Hard, Roy accelerated the Zeppelin's motor.  We six skipped like stones in the many directions. Into Lake Mento, Jason, Jeremy, Matty, Dave, Jamie and me. 
             Jeremy perished first.  He had been frost bitten for hours by then after the paddle boat ride and the shock of the March cold finished him quickly.  Matty was next. He just gave up.  Jason and I clung onto one another and watched Roy quietly tending to the barrels he had anchored a few metres away from the death scene.  Dave thrashed and flailed ignoring the buoyancy of his life jacket.  Maybe it was reflex because he couldn't swim.  Jason and I begged Roy to see things another way before it was too late for us too.  But Roy just circled the six barrels in the 'C' shape he would soon need as he whistled under his breath.  We were too soon dead.
     One after another Roy removed the life jacket from each of us just before packing us in, one barrel each.  After sealing every barrel, leaving enough air in each to allow for easy towing, he was underway in less than fifteen minutes. Using a depth finder Roy was finding the eight hundred foot bottom of Lake Mento.  This site was happily, for Roy anyway, on his way home. 
     Before going too far, Roy used the full Boston Whaler gas can, stored on the Zeppelin to re-fuel, but he panicked and dropped the can.  Suddenly, a light had appeared on his home horizon.  The first and only glitch in his over planned mission to destroy us. Two teenagers  parked to make out.  While he waited, cut the boat motor and checked the depth metre again.  Deep enough.  Roy re-entered the water to make a grab for the gas can but it was floating away too rapidly for him to catch it.  He cut his losses quickly and preceded to sink us one by one by punching in the perforated circles he had made earlier in each barrel.  Using the paddle boat to hop off of, Roy's body weight sent bubbles gurgling from the barrels as we sank, each one, down and down.  Next he hooked the tow rope to the speed boat and waited for the couple to leave.
    After an hour, the kids started their car and pulled away.

                                ~
     Parts of Davey floated as a rumor on their freedom ride to Canada.  At home the rumor and innuendo about our disappearance had stopped.  Parents had turned against each other.  Peers had started jobs and families.   And Davey's bits and bites wafted their way home.  And they might have made it too except for the fish.  A Muskie here, a Pike there, wolfing down his bits and bites.

                                   ~
     Roy figured the authorities wouldn't started searching until dawn.  It was four thirty a.m.  Re-starting the Zeppelin he quietly pulled the Boston Whaler into Bonisteel Bay and up twelve mile creek toward the circuit judge's historic home.  He had played, swam, fished, guided on the creek all his life.
Finding the sheltered cove near the road were he had left his truck several hours later, he debark the Zeppelin, deflated it and stuffed it on the truck.  He would leave the other boat and deal with it later.