Archive for the ‘Eckerman visits’ Category

Something for my Eckerman buddies

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

   I heard from Don today as he was on his way to the vets for Maggie. If you’ll remember, it was Maggie and Salley that were with us on Don’s first successfull bear hunt. They were both stolen and taken over near Strongs and let lose along the road. On their way back home, Salley was hit by a truck and eventually Maggie made it back to camp.

   Maggie was suffering from Cancer, and Don decided it was best to let her join her sister rathen than let her suffer.

 I am very sorry Don.

Habitat Observation 04/19/08

Sunday, April 20th, 2008

   Doug and I took a walk across the area we’d planted the Rape/kale crop and we wern’t exactly impressed. What impressed us more is the amount of quackgrass that has regenerated in the area, so we’ve decided to use an application of “Round Up” and reseed with a different mixture. The Chickory was doing very well, but the deer didn’t show any interest it in until February, when things started getting nasty. Someday I’ll be able to plant a crop with no benifits to me, but the day isn’t TOO day. That’ll get sprayed too. The area adjacent to a pine stand will be cultivated and corn planted. It will be planted parallel to the creek on one side and an open field on the other. The area has already proven to be a pathway and the corn and rape should increase the potential.

   While I was there, Becky mentioned that she was going to throw something away rather than use it at her ‘garage sale’ and I told her then that I was going to post it in my blog. It’s the first time in 13 years that I’ve heard her say “I’m going to throw it out”. Kudo’s Becky, the area landfills were going out of business due to people like you, and they need to work too you know.

   6 days from this very moment I’ll be fishing for trout, 4 days from this very moment I’ll be sittin’ on the shitter with the door propped open with my foot.

Eckeruary ‘08

Sunday, March 2nd, 2008

   I went up to Eckerman with Don last week on our yearly February visit. Some years, Doug, B.B. or Jamie were there but it didn’t work out that way this year. We’d scheduled a couple different weekends where we could all go, but that’s hard to do with everyone having families. Finally, Don had had enough and asked me on a spur of the moment thing to run up, spend one night and come back the next day. He wanted to see someone about a load of wood for the cabin and watch Gunnar in a basketball playoff game.

   Gunnar had been on the J.V. team as a Freshman and was moved up to varsity for this game. He lives in St. Ignace and they were playing Manestique in Rudyard, which is only 30 miles away. 30 miles in the U.P. is like 5 miles in the L.P. Your nearest neighbor might be a mile down the road, but “he’s right next door”.

   We got to the cabin around 4 so we still had enough time to get the fire going before the sun disapeared behind the pines. No matter how cold it is during the day, once the sun gets near the tops of those trees, it gets worse fast. After opening the cabin up, I grabbed a scoop shovel and started digging my way out. To get in, I had to climb over a small glacier left from the snowplow operator. I haven’t figured out why he leaves a nice pile of snow there, but I’m not the one doing the work. The snow depth is lower this year than two years ago, but it’s still 3′ on the level which makes for some nice snow piles.

   After I’d cut a way into the cabin, I off loaded two tubs of firewood and split some up for Don. He’d used what was left in the cabin but we were going to need a lot more than that. No one is allowed to transport firewood across the bridge due to the Emarald Ash Borer, but we were using maple and kept it all in those tubs with the lid on. It turned out that it took two tubs for 24 hours heating. With the cabin heating up, Don and I headed over to Rudyard for his son’s basketball game.

   We figured that the game would start at 7 so we left around 6 figuring it would give us pleanty of time to get there and watch some warmups before the game. The roads were clear and dry with the snowbanks pushed way back, so we could see well into the tree line. There was a lot of evidence of snowmobile traffic but there were very few machines out and there wasn’t any game tracks. On the way up from Ann Arbor I saw many spots where herds of deer have crossed I75, but there wasn’t a one crossing M28. The road from 28 down to Rudyard was gravel in the summer and ice covered in spots that night. In between the ice spots, huge billowing clouds of claydust followed us down the road, but we didn’t know it at the time. It wasn’t till the ride back when we met on coming traffic and went blind for periods when we realized what was up. It turned out the game started at 6 instead of 7 and they were half way through the 3rd period when we arrived. We wern’t able to catch any of Gunnar’s playing and unfortunatly they lost the game.

   When we got back to the cabin, it was zero degrees. I looked everywhere and not a one was to be seen. The cabin was warm, 65 degrees warmer than it was outside and I almost gave the stove a hug. As much as I enjoy being warm, I enjoy it even more when it’s cold as hell outside and I’m not. We’d been told that the low would be around -10º and that turned out to be an underestimate. We were pleanty hungry when we got back from the game, so we both started getting out our goodies.

   Don brought along some sauerkraut and sausage, and I brought up some bourbon marinated meatballs. He’d been giving me crap about my dislike for kraut and I think he wanted to see if I was as bad as I said I was. He was right, I was wrong and the stuff is great! Must be mom added something that ignited my puke fuse, that Don doesn’t use. After dinner we sat at the kitchen table and talked about the cabin, and their plans for it.

   It’s being planned to remove the vestibule and replace it with a screened in porch. It would add half again it’s floor area and make the cabin accessable all year. You can get to the cabin year round, living there is another matter. I have yet to witness the conditions personally, but I’ve been West of there about the same time and know the effects. When you return home from one of these events, you carry reminders of it for days afterwards. For me, it was the hat line where the blackfly’s would gather and trade bodily fluids with me, leaving hard itching bumps behind.

   I was peeing in the Hiawatha National Forest one time when I looked down upon my manhood and saw a mosqueto having her way with me. The punch lines are endless and I’ll leave it at that.

   Anyway, the front porch will be a great addition to the cabin and I’m looking forward to help build it. As the evening progressed, we’d step outside to check the temp and take a leak. It’s nice being the male of the species, we don’t have to sit. Neither one of us had been back to the shithouse yet, but we knew it was gonna be cold when we got there. Every year I take a picture of the pretty crystals that seem to form around the ring and I planned on doing that in the morning. After all the pork I’d just eaten I knew my butt was going to be ploped upon it, first thing. It was -6º when we went to bed.

   It was -18º when we got up. While relieving myself, I looked straight up and saw light emmited 100 billion years ago, from a point in the sky. The MilkyWay was a solid cloud rather than specks of light and my piss was froze solid by the time I walked back in the cabin. Don had got up earlier and had a pot of coffee on, so I had a cup of coffee with me when I headed for the outhouse. With a small stove and a flashlight in one hand, and coffee in the other, I trudged back to see what delights that little building beheld this morning.

Bet its good for the 'roids too!

   It’s things like this that can create constipation and maybe even erectile dysfunction, but what’s a guy to do? It didn’t take long to clear the problem and having it that cold does have it’s benifits. (There won’t be a picture of that) I feel for the first person in there after the thaw though.

   After it got warm enough for me to stay outside longer than necessary, I got out my 10/22 and went looking for targets. I was looking for snow puffs to shoot when Don suggested a tree limb. One of the poplars in his yard is dying back and it needed some pruning. He picked out a particular spot and we started pecking away at it until it fell off and we worked our way back. There were woodchips and .22 casings everywhere and three nice limbs stuck in the snow below the tree. One more limb is still attatched with a nice hole drilled through it but I suspect it’ll be down by the time I get up there again.

   Around 11, Don fried up some pork loins that he’d been marinating in a vigenette all morning and the cabin once again took on that aroma. We cleaned up the cabin, and made a list of everything the cabin would need for the next trip and headed off to our next assignment. Last year while I was there, I picked up a load of firewood from a guy in Strongs and we were going to see if he’d deliver. He wasn’t there, he was off logging pine, but Don got three phone numbers from the store there in town. His wife and some friends of theirs are going to use the cabin in a couple weeks and they’re going to need it. They may want to take an extra heater for the outhouse too.

B & M’s E A….addedum

Monday, May 14th, 2007

   For some reason, I left out 2 1/3 days from the preceeding post. I gave Butch some bullshit excuse but I think I did it ’cause my brain was tired. It’s still tired but I have to finish one project before I can start on the next.

   During the week, Mark had wanted to take us to the ‘Bear Butt Bar’ for a beer and to meet the local people. There was a sign out front that said it was going to open on May 2nd and the last time I was in the area, I’d stopped in and the owner had told me they’d be closed until the end of May. I figured he’d changed his mind and opened earlier but that was not the case. When we pulled up there on the 3rd, it was closed and the 4 had been replaced on the sign out front. Anyway, I asked Mark if he’d be willing to take us to breakfast on the last morning, rather than buy us a beer, and he was all for it.

   This time when we walked into the Maple Ridge Restaurant, we seated ourselves in the ‘No Smoking’ section. Gail (Gail Will; the owner, manager, hostess, cashier, cook, dishwasher, and go-fer), came over with a smile and told us how happy she was to see us seated there. Gail took our order and on the way back to the kitchen, told everyone in the ’smoking’ section about our change in lifestyle. I wanted to attempt negotiations for a second loaf of bread, but a dozen turkey hunters came in and she was going to be busy for a while. While we were there, I saw she was talking to a real estate agent and already I felt as though I was losing a friend. I hope she gets everything she wants for it, but I also hope it don’t happen until I’ve been up there again.

   Saturday morning Butch and I took my Jonboat down from Webster’s bridge to Rogers’ for some trout fishing. This is the same area of river, that our father took us on when we were kids. He had learned the river from taking his dad and his father-in-law on fishing trips when he was younger. It’s no wonder my father hated fishing so much, he probably spent a good deal of his youth polling a riverboat with two old codgers fishing from it. The river then and the river now are two intirely different habitat’s though.

   “Yeeears agooo, the water in that river never saw a beam of sunlight until it broke out into Lake Charlevoix, and not long after that, there were two masted schooners lying in the estuary. There were holes with no bottoms and fish so big they couldn’t swim to the next. It was very cold, very deep, and extremly productive.” (various sources; some can even be believed).

   It’s not that way anymore. The monsterous cedar’s, the deep dark holes, and the cold clear water are all gone. As soon as we were launched, about 8am, we could tell it was different. There used to be a hole at the launch site that I fished just three years ago and it was gone. The water has a turbidity to it that reminds me of down state rivers, like the Rifle and a little bit of like the Rouge. I don’t think the gray hue is from septic sewage, it just reminds me of it. We traveled quite a ways before we came upon a likely spot. We were looking for trees that had fallen half way across the river and it’s branch’s were still attached. It doesn’t take long for a tree to create a hole when the bottom is sediment anyways, but the river is also used by canoests. The river produces more money with it’s boat rental’s than it does for worm’s at Tom’s Bait, so we can see the problem here. On this trip I brought along the Sonar too. I was curious how deep some of those old holes are and how many fish are in them. The water temperature was 51º when we put in and 52.8º where we pulled out, and it comes out of the planet at 42º constant. When our grandparents fished it, it would enter Lake Charlevoix at 42º. Sediment is another problem. There is a stretch of river not far from Webster’s bridge, that was all pure gravel, 4′ deep, and over 300 yards long. It’s now 8″ deep and all sand. The gravel was where the brookies and the steelhead would spawn and most of its gone. At the end of that straightaway lays the “Cedar Hole” where another stream enters the river from the West. In that hole is where I caught my first brook trout. My father told me of the many rainbows and browns that that hole had produced and of the days he spent there with his dads. Grandpa Griffin would be standing shirtless in a cedar swamp and the mosqueto’s would be having a freeding frenzy. Every once in a while, Grandpa would wipe them off his arms, leaving bloody streaks down to his fingertips. He said the two of them talked of the wars, from the Mexican, through the First War, and then the Second and involved personally, in them all.

   Neither one of us got squat out of that hole but the next one got Butch’s attention. We had finally jostled around with the chain anchor to get in the right spot, and Butch had a nice one on. I was stairing off into space while looking at my rod tip, when I hear “Shit, fish on!” Butch has his tip up, it’s bent over double and taking line. What a sight! A bright red streak heading upstream just below the surface until Butch changes his mind. It came straight up out of the water doing that wonderful dance they do and headed for the bottom. I hear another “Shit” and the line goes slack. We both laughed. Butch because if he didn’t he’d throw his rod overboard and me because I thought it was funny.

   Another problem we were having is watching all those holes go buy that we didn’t fish. Some of them you just can’t tell until your over them. We talked about taking one of those hand held G.P.S. units and mark every hole you see, and then save it. In one of those holes I caught a 12″ brown. I’d like to go on about how stealthly I persued it, and how I first gained it’s trust, and then set the hook. Nope, not that way at all. I never felt her and she was half way to the boat when I started reeling. We noticed each other about the same time, but by then she had swollowed the hook and it was a done deal. The second one was hooked fair and square but there wasn’t anything spectacular about bringing it in.

   The next day we went out again and this time we fished many of the holes we’d missed before. In one of them, I lost a nice steelhead. This time it was Butch’s turn to laugh. He’d been telling me to replace the fishing line I was using, from the first day we fished. There had been many instances where I’d get snagged on a limb and just give it a yank, and tie on another hook. He was using some fire line, or some such name and he’d retrieve the whole friggin’ log every time he hooked one on. Personally, I like to give the fish a better chance than not biting it at all. I’d prefer to use 4lb, but I can’t see stuff that small. Anyway, this one saw the error of my ways and just jerked it’s head real quick and the fight was over. By the time we got to the bottom of the river, I’d snapped off all the old nasty stuff, and was using the old good stuff. It’s got another season in it, and it’s fun to watch them swim away. Other than losing that fish, there wasn’t any activity. We lost a few crawlers to an unknown source and Butch and I had a great time and a wonderful ride.

   Thanks Butch, for all the wonderful rides.

Butch and Mike’s excellent adventure

Friday, May 11th, 2007

   Butch and I go waaay back. Hell, he’s been like a brother to me all my life, so when this opportunity finally presented itself, I took it. We’ve been talking of the “High Holy Day’s of Obligation” (The Opening Day of Trout Season) for over 8 years, and we were going to spend it together again.

   He and I have been through some pretty hard times over the last couple of years but through it all, we made plans for this event. In the past, it wasn’t for this particular year, or this particular spot, only that we would be spending it together. On the last Wednesday of March this year, it became this particular year. With his first retirement check he drove over to Cabelas’ and started gearing up. From what he’s told me, he’d been working on this ‘wish list’ for Cabelas’ since last September. That’s when it started, it became larger as he watched all of those fishing programs, and started reading on the internet. He’s been laid up with R.A. (Rheumatoid Arthritis) and over the winter he ran out of medications while waiting for the Social Security Administration to make it’s judgement. All he could do was lay in pain, watch t.v., and dream of Spring. When Mark and I picked him up on the 26th, his tackle box weighed 35#. If he’d been coming up strictly for trout it may have weighed 15, but Walleye and Pike open on that day too.

   When we’d first started talking about the opener, it was going to be all trout, all the time, but Doug Frye had offered an invite to go Walleye fishing. Trout are a hellava lot more fun to catch, and the surrounds are infinitly more beautiful, but Walleye are way tastier.

   Doug stopped by Friday afternoon to talk about the following day and I offered to cook breakfast. He’d be here around 4:15, we’d have breakfast at 4:30 and be on the water at 6. It’s hardly daylight then, but pleanty light enough to walk and load a boat. We would have been there on time but half way there, Doug asked me if I’d loaded the crawlers, and I hadn’t. They were sitting right by the door where I’d put them so’s I wouldn’t forget. Just as we were about to leave the dock, Doug’s brother Ed drove up with his boat so we helped him off load his. Butch moved over to Ed’s boat and we headed out of Dutchman’s Bay at 6:15. Using crawler harness’ and jig heads with large minnows, we began trolling along the drop off. We kept to a 17′ depth and the water temperature varied from 48.9 to 49.7º and crystal clear. There was a breeze out of the Southwest that became much warmer than the water temp and pretty soon, we were overtaken by a fog bank. The visibility dropped to about 8″ and the thought; “We’re fucked” passed through our heads. The last time I was in a fog like that I was on a ship in the Mediterranian and we had lotsa radar to guide us. This time it was just me an’ Douggie somewhere between town and Holy Island, and two pair of Mk 1 eyeballs. We got a little nervous until Doug remembered his GPS and that it had a compass with it. He had used it to track a spot where we’d caught them last year, and brought that up from memory. All we had to do then was scan out and plot a course. After 3/4 of a mile with my hands out in front of me looking for other boats, we cleared it and found the spot.

   Butch and Ed were already there but they hadn’t had caught any walleye yet. Doug and Ed both had caught bass by then though. Doug had his first about 10 minutes after we started fishing and by then had caught 3 more. I don’t know where the Small mouth’s grow up, but Lake Charlevoix is where they go when they’re grown. The average weight of the 13 we got that day was about 4lbs. Other than the 20″ pike I caught, there wasn’t any walleye amongst them.

   The next morning, Doug picked us up at 5:30 and we were on the water at 6. We put in at the fleet landing in town and I remembered the crawlers. The air temperature was 34º and the water between 49.1 and 50º with a breeze out of the Southwest. Our tatict’s and bait were the same as were the results. Doug caught one bass, 5.4# and one about 3#. It was pretty obvious we weren’t going to catch anything that day, so we pulled out around 9. The rest of the day was spent putting everything on the front porch that was going with us tomorrow and figuring out a way to get it all on the truck.

   Mark had bought a bracket that fits into the Reese hitch and will extend the use of the bed out farther, or load a boat on top with the bow over the cab. My 10′ johnboat was 3′ short of using it that way, so I used it the other. I didn’t realize how much crap we had to take for a weeks worth of fun and fishing in the U.P., but it all got in there. Mark and I loaded it and Butch strapped it down. I do believe that if we’d gone over the edge on the Mackinac Bridge, it would still be a bundle on the bottom. If anyone ever needs to know what Butch want’s for his birthday, get him rope. At 9:30am, Butch, Mark, Annie, and I were on the road and headed for Eckerman.

   I had been a little concerned how Annie would take to riding that far, but after realizing she wasn’t heading for the vet’s office, she went to sleep. Butch I wasn’t worried about, I figured he knew I wasn’t taking him to the vet’s, but he didn’t sleep. Other than a trip to the Locks, he’d never been in the U.P. before. We were between Trout Lake and Eckerman when he said how much it resembled northern Canada. He went on two moose hunts with our Uncle Pete, many moon’s ago and was a little suprised.

   We arrived at the cabin just before Noon and were sitting around the fire at 1:15. I had a batch of real nice Maple left over from my last visit, so that fire would burn until we left. I made that comment to Butch at the time, and I believe he thought I was full of shit, but was nice enough not to say so. While Mark and I were unloading the truck, Butch grabbed the hatchet and started splitting some of the pieces into kindling. I’d been watching him work as we went back and forth, and when I’d unloaded the kitchen tub, I gave my torch to Mark. I told him to tell Uncle Butch, “Here’s the kindling” and hand him the torch. He did, and he kept of chopping. When I was all done, I went out, grabbed the torch and took it to the pile of wood I had, and lit ‘er up. Butch was proud of me. He told me he used to take a vile of gasoline with him when he went camping with the Boy Scout’s and always won the contest for boiling water. They didn’t have torch’s then. Hell, they were still using flint.

   One of the things I was worried about on this trip was with Annie. She’s a two year old beagle that has the outwordly appearance of a lazy hound, but her eyes are sharp and her nose is cold. I had to find out if she’d bolt the first time I let her off the leash, with only the memories of her baying off into the distance left behind. I figured what the hell, and let her go inside the cabin. She wandered out into the yard, sniffing everything and returning every time we called, so I felt pretty good about it all. Then she ran across the highway and ended her freedom for the rest of the trip. She came right back when called, but I havn’t taught her Stop and Down yet, so she went back on the leash.

  

   Another project I was interested in was of “The effects of luminis radiation upon apples and corn in a rodent infested territory”, and took steps to fulfill this endevor. One test station was set up adjacent to the “Old” outhouse and the other to the Zipp camping area. One could be viewed from the back bedroom window and the other from the kitchen table. Both were well within the distance needed to obtain a pesticide applicator and a decent position to carry out the operation, should the need arise. It arose not ten minutes later and Mark was given credit for his contribution to the study. After everything was unloaded, unpacked, and mostly refridgerated, Butch and I headed over to High Banks for some Trout fishing.

   Mark had decided to stay at the cabin with Annie, clean up the area some, and keep a fire. Butch decided that he’d fish from shore using slip sinkers and crawlers and I’d try trolling with plugs and lures. The last time I was here, Doug and I used blue and chrome little cleo’s and hit ‘em hard, so I had that on when I pushed myself out onto the lake. As soon as I turned on the Sonar though, things changed. From 3′ to 27′ feet, there is an evenly distributed markings of bait fish, probably fingerling trout. From 27′ to 45′, the echo’s came from the top 4′ of water and it was solid with fingerlings. Amongst them were larger trout riding herd on the mass’s and eating at will. I got rid of that Cleo and had a Rapala on in no time. It was an hour of trolling back and around before I had a hit, and it almost pulled the rod right out of my hand. I normally use a spin cast rig while fishing there, but this year I brought up one of those new fangled level winds and she didn’t stand a chance. Just before the season opener, I had re-spooled it with 6# Spiderwire so I wasn’t worried about it breaking this time. My only concern was whether it had hooked herself well enough. In any case, I let her have her room until she was tired enough to get it up to the boat. It was hooked twice, once deep in it’s gullet and another up-side her head. The one up-side her head is the one that buried itself into my leg, and with the help of Coumadin, it flushed itself out after removing the hook. The next pass I made to the other end of the lake, I held it up to brag, and Butch reached down into the lake and hoisted up a bigger one. I flipped him the “International Recognization Signal” and headed back out. Butch ended up with another one, about the same size as mine and we headed back to cook ‘em up. Mark had kept a fire going so we had a nice bed of coals to work with when we got back. I don’t think Butch had ever had fish cooked over an open fire and was a wee bit leary when I told him they were done. As soon as he put a fork to the meat, it all fell off the bones, and he knew what was what. As soon as the sun started to drop behind the tree’s, the temperature did to and I stoked up the coals in the stove and added a couple pieces of wood. It don’t take a whole lot of Maple to keep that cabin warm, but it sure feels good to walk in and have dry heat hit ya.

   Now Annie was really in her element. 3 guys sittin’ around shooting the bull with nothing to do but make sure she got petted. It worked out pretty good for everyone until it was time to go to bed. Her second best endearment, is her ability to keep couch’s and bed’s warm until you want to use one. That’s where the endearment part comes up a little short. Once she’s comfy, she’s there and it gets to be a challenge sometimes to move her ass over far enough to sit or lay. The first night, she slept with Butch; wrapped around his head and nuzzled up to his neck. The second night she slept with me, in about the same fashon, but I was getting up every 3 or 4 hours to put a log in the stove. I’d have to bother her every time I got up so she moved to my feet.

   Tuesday morning I got up at 0 dark 45 and it was 37º with no wind. The remains of last night’s campfire laid in three pieces, and it wasn’t very tough to get the fire going again. One piece of maple and those three chunks of poplar were soon lighting the yard and my path to the outhouse. (Plans are afoot to run electricity to the ol’ Shathouse and on morning’s like this it will be greatly appreciated. Nothing wakes one up faster than the contact of one’s nice warm ass to that toilet seat. Should one’s aim to the seat be off by just a little, the home boys shriek in protest and head to warmer environs, not to be seen for hours.) That finished and after a couple cups of coffee with Butch, we got Mark up and started our day.

   A month or so earlier, Butch and I were talking about his trip when the thought of coming up here presented itself. Once we started talking about that, I came up with a plan where we would fish a couple of the trout lakes that I’ve mentioned in the Eckerman stories and Butch was all for it. I figured we’d go to the furthest; Dutch Fred and Lost lks North of Seney, and then to the Belle lks, which are North of Newberry. The third day I figured we’d go up to Whitefish Point and then back to the falls on the Tequhamenon River, and fish High Banks the next day.

   Instead of cooking breakfast this day, I took the guys to the Maple Ridge Restaurant which is at the corner of M28 and M123. While I was up here earlier, I’d stopped there for a couple breakfasts and was warmly received and very impressed with the homemade Rye bread. On the morning that I was leaving, the owner gave me a loaf to take home, and she said if had quit smoking the next time I came in, she’d give me another one. Well, I hadn’t. I actually thought about taking one of those patch’s I’ve got and slap it on my arm just before I walked in, but I think my guradian angles made me forget. Anyway, we sat in the smoking section and she went on with her work totally ignoring us. Just when I thought she didn’t remember me, she walked out with a loaf of Rye bread and stood before me. “Have you quit smoking yet?”, “Nope, and I’m sorry”, “Me too” and she headed back towards the kitchen. She turned around and said “Ya thought I forgot didn’t you?”. I ended up buying that loaf and I told her we’d be back. Breakfast was terriffic. We were half way to Newberry on our way to Seney when I remembered the night crawlers.

   There’s a gas station/grocery store/deli/hardware/bait shop in Newberry that has a sign on the side of the building that says “If we ain’t got it, you don’t need it”, and they’re right. East Jordan could use a deli that nice.

   We turned right onto M77 and headed North 3.3 miles to a two track that leads off to the West. We had just pulled off the highway and rolled down our windows when the daily episode of “Michigan-out-of-Door’s” started. Off to our right, were piles of 10′ Jack Pine logs, and atop the second one a Bald Eagle launched itself heading down the two track. For the first 25′ or so, it was only 15′ in front of us so we got a close up, front row seat to see how one of those things fly. It’s tail feathers, that were a brilliant white and fanned out “Flaps down” as it flew, was over 3′ wide and it’s wing tips reached out farther than the two track was wide. When it had gained enough speed, it dropped down to within 3′ of the ground and then really began to pump it’s wings. We could see the muscle groups bulging as they carried out their functions and the feather tips moving as needed. All this while I’m franticaly looking for my camera and trying to keep the truck in the ruts. It slowly gained speed and distance and after another 50′, pulled up and banked to the left and gone. It took a couple more seconds after that to realize how big that bird was, and what a show we watched.

   Except for Annie needing to get out and walk a quarter mile to get her belly straight, the rest of the ride was pretty mundane. When I dropped off M77 onto the two track, I had a County Map book with me and I highly suggest anyone going in there to have one with them. A GPS would be better, a LOT better, but the book gives you a chance. From the coordiance’s given on the map book, count out how many miles it is from one given point to another, and set your odomiter to zero. When the odomiter gets close to your intersection, pay attention to where you are. If you’ve gone too far, turn around and go back to the original point and figure it again. I spent three days back there once and had no idea where the hell we were. Fortunatly we had a lot of food and beer and didn’t particularly want to get found, but still… Using that method we got to Dutch Fred lk just as it started to rain again.

   Mark volunteered to take the boat out and look around with the Sonar for whatever may lurk beneath. He drove around for quite a while until he found them in 28′ of water with some bait fish. The water temperature was 51º, just like it was at High Banks, but there wern’t nearly as many bait fish involved. We hooked up with some blue and chrome Cleo’s and bronze Crocodiles and later with crawler harness’s with bottom bouncers and no takers. While Mark was out there looking, there was a beaver watching him. He said he watched it swim out from the South shore, give him the once over, and swim off to the West beach where it lumbered off into the woods. After that critter dissapeared, two birds of unknown origin or species flew in over the tree tops and began to land. They appeared to be some type of goose but when they made their call’s it didn’t sound nothing like any bird I’ve ever heard. We spent the better part of 4 hours trying to figure a way to get aimed over the school of fish and not having to turn every 60′. Dutch Fred is a very small, deep, pond and trolling is a hard way to do it there. The wind began to blow harder and that little 10 footer just ain’t up to the challenge, so we wrote it up as “Inconclusive” and headed back to the cabin. On the way out, we didn’t have any more ‘close encounters’ but we did notice the vegitation. It’s mostly Jack Pine that’s growing out of dune sand, with lichen covering the areas between the trees. It looked like it was once all White Pine, with trunks that make those at Hartwick Pines look middle aged. After the harvest I figure they burned it all off and really sterilized it and it’s just now getting going again. It isn’t that way back on the East end, the area across the street from Zipp’s was clear cut 15 years ago, and a rhino couldn’t get through it now. When we pulled in from a day of all that nature interaction, there were a pair of partridge makin’ whoopie over the bait pile…er, test station and we got to watch some of that. Those birds look just like Indian’s dancing around a camp fire on heiratige night, and I attempted to get some pictures. When I got back to a computer and blew up the images, I found they were a little blurred, but those two were really goin’ at it.

   For our cullinary delight we had rice and green beans and Butch made strawberries for dessert. After that I think we all made Ham sandwich’s…I’m not much of a camp cook. We built up the campfire some and listened to it crack and pop while the frogs croaked and something very strange, called from the tree tops.

   Wednesday I woke up at 0545 and it was 42º and cloudy. It had rained some more last night but not enough to quench the campfire cold. There was one lonely log piece laying there all quiet and benign but it let off a wiff of smoke. I was on it like asprin on a headache. I reached over and grabbed a couple small pieces of maple and laid them aside the piece and had a fire in no time. Butch looked over at me and said “How the fuck do you do that?” “Ya gotta have faith Butch” I said, “He does the work and I give him the credit, nothin’ to it”.

   We had decided the night before to delay the trip to Belle’s lk, and go up to Whitefish Point instead. By then our back’s had had enough of that boat and Annie looked as though she’d appreciate a day off. It’s tough having to get up and move everytime the sunny spot disapeared from the beach she was laying on. Until Mark got up though we had some time to fish, so Butch and I headed across the street.

   Elliots fishin’ hole as improved greatly over the last couple of years, and if he’s reading this: “YOU’VE GOT A NICE HOLE THERE PAT”. Well, maybe I shouldn’t have put it quite that way, but you know what I’m talkin’ about. As a matter of fact, the whole area over there has made some astounding changes over the last 3 years or so. When he first bought the property, there was a junk yard/used schoolbus/more junk that covered 5 acres or so, and it’s been reduced to two small piles of landfill. The fishing hole in question though was only a small hole hidden by brush and protected by mosqueto’s. When I go across the street with the guys fishing, I stop at that hole and wait for them to come back out. That’s about as far as I can get through that jungle and now there’s a nice path leading to it, and a real nice clearing to fish from. I wasn’t going to fish this time, I was just dropping off Butch and start breakfast.

   Butch decided to use his bait casting rig with a three way swivel. A bell sinker from the bottom, and a lead with a leaf worm off the center. Now you have to remember, Butch has been spending most of his time watching fishing show’s on t.v. and even got to the point where he believed that crap. He kept seeing that dude that kiss’s the fish do his casting with one of those bait casters, so Butch figured he could do it too. Hell, back in the day, Butch did cast that well with one of those, and that was before someone invented a ‘level wind’ feature affixed. But that was many, many moons ago and as all those moons passed overhead, Butch wasn’t practicing. I’ve got a picture here of Butch’s backlash that’ll make ya sick. From what he’s told me, he had a couple more of those and when it did get into the hole, they wern’t biting. He did however, find material for two walking staff’s and that really made his day. He makes them with gnomes carved into the handles and he’s going to use the talent to make some side money.

   By 10:30 we were on our way to Whitefish Point. Christian’s and Jew’s have Jerusalum, the Muslems have Mecca, Mark has Whitefish Point. The museum there has been Mark’s focal point for the last 10 years and when he heard this was part of the trip, his whole demeanor changed. Mark’s not big on fishing, I think he fish’s just so we can share something so this trip wasn’t as exciting to him as it was to us, until now. Once we got there, Mark mumbled something about having to get to a bathroom quick and disapeared. By the time Butch and I finally made it to the museum, Mark had seen it twice and was escorting us around the place explaining everything. He stopped reverently in front of the bell and bowed his head, remembering everything he’s read about what happend and the people involved. As Butch and I slowly passed among the exhibits, Mark dissapeared again, and as we were entering the movie house, he was leaving. When Butch and I walked in, he was sitting there with the hostess in the front row discussing the movie. Butch and I watched the movie they have there and after walking through the gift shop, walked back to the truck. Mark continued on through all of the exhibits and learned alot more about the place as he went along. At the ‘Lifeboat’ shop, he met Tom Farnquest who was part of the expedition to retrieve the Fitz’s anchor when she lost it in the Detroit River, and again when the ship’s bell was exchanged with a memorial bell that was set it it’s place. He then went to the lighthouse itself where he learned the first lighthouse was built of stone, and didn’t have any foundation under it. As the sand shifted with the wind and waters, it began to collapse so it was re-built where it stands now.

   Now, as being a veteran NAVY man, I wonder why the COAST GUARD would build a lighthouse with no footings, but it was probably the fault of the Army Corpse of Engineer’s. I just know for a fact that the NAVY nor the MARINES would ever do such a thing. Maybe the Air Force might, them just being bus drivers and all.

   From there, we headed back towards the Falls. On the way up, I’d stopped at the gas station there and bought some gas. $3.19 a gallon. I thought that was bad enough, but on the way back, it was $3.39. It’s no wonder this area is almost all closed up.

   The view of the lower falls is something to see, even in the Spring when there isn’t much vegitation. I imagine that in the Fall, it’s absolutly glorious in its colors. The water is a rusty red from the tannic acid in the water, (Tannic acid is produced from decomposing leaves in a very wet invironment) and the colors changed as it flowed over the falls. There wern’t many people there, we saw a few that were at the museum and some bird watchers. Birds watchers are fun to watch. All gussied up in the bird watching outfits, carrying around binoculars that’re only focused in for one eye. They haven’t figured out how to focus the other one yet, but they sure look impressive doing it.

   The rest of that afternoon was spent hanging around camp and cleaning up the yard some more. John Paul and his wife were up, next door, and they’d been cleaning up all day. I felt a little guilty sitting there with leaves all around me and these two are preparing for ‘Better home and Gardens” to show up and start taking pictures. Butch worked on his walking staffs and after meeting John and his wife, made dinner for us. He makes a Sheppards Pie that puts mom’s to shame. Mom’s Shepard’s Pie was one reason I joined the Navy, and as soon as I heard they don’t cook that crap, I signed up.

   Thursday morning didn’t start until 0645 and it was 45º and clear when I did so. There wasn’t any wind, so Butch and I headed over to High Banks for some morning trolling. The water temperature was still between 49.7 and 50.2 with the fingerlings still in the same configuration as earlier. We added using a crawler harness with bottom bouncers to our arsenal of baits without any success. We spoke of going down to the South end and using crawlers with barrel sinkers and crawlers, but the wind picked up and we decided to try it another time.

   After a breakfast of bacon and eggs, Butch headed back across the street to Pat’s and Mark and I putzed around the camp. While Mark and I were taking a break, one of the rodents from the ’study’ showed up in the ‘test station’ and I made an application using the ‘pesticide applicator’. He smoked his last cigarette afterwards, as will be seen in the photo if it ever gets put in here. Something else that showed up while Butch was gone, was ‘Trout’.

   I don’t know if Trout is his first name, or his last, or only an alias but after meeting the guy, it doesn’t matter. He stopped in to see if we belonged there, as did a young man named Eric who stopped in later. The neighbor’s keep a very close eye on each other’s property there and they’re all very friendly. It’s hard telling how it would have went if I was a class A asshole though, there’s a LOT of forest up there.

   That night we did something I’ve never done before up there, we watched Survivor on t.v. Butch brought along a battery operated portable t.v. so we could check out the weather each morning. As it turned out, we didn’t use it until that night but it was fun doing so. We sat right next to the fire, listened to the frogs and those things that’re still calling from the tree tops and some shmuck getting voted off the island. C.S.I. was on next but the t.v. lost it’s allure and we turned it off.

   Friday morning I got up at 0515 with clear sky’s and 32º. Mark had reloaded the cabin with firewood so I stoked ‘er up some and did the same to the campfire. Butch and I talked it over, and with the price of gas going up again, and us being short of funds, we decided to head back home. The ride home was pretty quiet with each of us thinking about the days before, and Annie thinking about all the wonderful couch’s waiting for her when she got home.

  

Seasonal changes

Tuesday, May 8th, 2007

I’ve been gone awhile so I’ve missed a lot of refrence points, but I just now saw that the Malus outside my window began blooming. I have noticed on the way back to drop off Butch yesterday, that once we get out of the valley, Spring hasn’t started yet. Between Gaylord and West Branch, it’s still early Spring. Here it’s 10 days ahead.

   Most of the time I was gone, I was with my brother Butch and my son Mark in the U.P. fishing. I’m in the process of writing up the report now, but the more I write, the more I remember. It may take a couple days.

A weekend in Eckerman

Tuesday, February 27th, 2007

   Don, Doug and I made our second annual February visit to Eckerman this weekend. On the way there, we noticed a decrease in the snow level the closer we got to St. Ignitius which was good news. Last year when we got to the cabin the snow was 4′ on the level and this year it was only 2′, so instead of shooting at puff balls up in the trees, we’d could do some fishing, and a little hunting.

   We stopped at Frenchmans’ Lake to relieve our bladders and check on the ice. From the looks of it, there had been a lot of traffic going out, and more importantly, coming back so we knew we could go fishing the next day. We found a half dozen holes poked in the ice with only and inch or so of ice formed in ‘em but there wasn’t any fish laying about. Don showed me why there wasn’t; there were coyote and fox tracks everywhere, so it wasn’t any suprise not to see any little ones. We were able to walk out this year because they’d had a pretty good thaw last week, and while it was real wet, it went back down to -10º and froze it up tight. The entire time we were on the lake, we could hear ice making, and it sounded as though it was making about a eighth inch an hour. 20 minutes later, we got up to the cabin and found that the thaw wasn’t as strong as it was in Trout Lake.

   Don had the parking area plowed throughout the winter and the piles wern’t nearly as large as they were last year. We could see over them, last year they were mountains. Don immediatly got busy with dinner, and Doug headed over to the wood pile, so I dug snow. It had melted enough that I could cut them into bit sized chunks in one foot cubes. The snow beneath it was like sugar sand and although it didn’t weigh much, it didn’t bind together to well either. I was back at the shathouse working my way towards the house when Doug walked back. He just started trampling this crap into submission and although it was a bitch walking through it that afternoon, the next morning it was like concrete. We had driven up with clear blue sky’s overhead, but now it was about 7 shades deeper so we got real busy with the firewood. Don had a fire going in the woodstove, so I picked up the split wood and stacked it in the cabin until it was about chest level. Most of the wood we had there was green poplar, so we knew we were in for chilly night. When we got there at 3, it was 12º, at 5 when all the work was done, it was 0º.

   Don had a pot of beans with bacon cooking on the stove, and the temperature was about 62 in the cabin, so it was easy getting comfortable. We sat there at the kitchen table and watched out the window for the main attraction to begin. The topics of the conversation were quite varied, but generally stayed within the Sex, Eating, and Hunting area, and not in that particular order. The hunting part of it had come around again when we definetly noticed that there wern’t any red squerrils around. Over the years, chasing, shooting at and then bragging about these little buggers, has been a mainstay of entertainment. While we were out cutting and hauling in wood, we could hear the little bastards chattering at us, and now, nothing. We started discussing of how over the years, they’ve become smarter, so we had to change our tactics a little. Don had noticed that at the gas station in Trout Lake, they sold corn. It wasn’t ten minutes later that I was on my way to the gas station.

   Doug had noticed on our way up, that a queing area a little North of Trout Lake was empty when we went by, but on our way back to the gas station, it was full of trucks. There was hardly any snow on these trails, and in some spots, there were 100′ swatch’s of pure sand, and yet these guys were running $8000 snow machines through this stuff. Must be these guys ate too much fudge and ice cream cones in the summer time.

   When Doug and I walked in the door this time, there were veal stakes frying in bacon grease, and cut up Michigan whites frying up in another. Jeez, but I do love walking into that cabin. For some reason, restaurants stay away from veal around here. I asked a waitress about it once and she when off on me. I got the whole “Oh poor little milk fed moo moo’s, dying young” and all that crap. I prefer my veal medium rare, and spotted venison the same. 

   Before I sat down to eat it, I got out my digital camera and took a picture of it for my brother. As you’ve probably noticed in these blog entries, we’ve fucked with each other in many ways, and this is another one. I usually describe what he’s seeing on the plate and how great it tasted, it does the ole’ boy good.

   Don had found some molassis while he was digging through his ingrediants so I heated it up, mixed it with the corn and spread it outside the kitchen window. We could see by the tracks that there were some squirrels and a couple hares, but nothing had come out by the time we went to bed around 11.

   We all got up about 7 to another clear blue, sunny day. For some reason, I was thinking about Spring when I walked out to the shathouse, but by the time I’d taken my first step outside, I saw the error. I checked the thermometer on the side of the cabin, and it said -8º. I knew it was going to be painfull when I seated my delicate ass upon that throne, and I was right. I’d brought a lp gas stove with me and had fired that up, but what the house needs is a boiler, and some copper pipe plumbed through the seat. I took a picture of what it looks like and I’ll see if I can get Katrina to post it. Something else that house could use is a vent. The new Ole’ Shathouse is losing it’s charm pretty quick.

   When I got back in, I told Doug how cold it was and he said at 3am when he got up to look up at the stars and pee down on the ground, it was -14º.

   After a pot of coffee and checking out the “Feed the wild for free and keep the tree huggers happy” project, outside the kitchen window, we headed down to Frenchmans’ Lake. The wind picked up out of the East, to about 15mph, so it was a little chilly when we got to the lake. We had talked about walking across to the other side of that bay, but once we were 200 yards out, we’d gone far enough. We could see from the color of the ice we were right at the drop off, so Don and Doug set up 4 tip-up’s. It was really cold out there so hand fishing was out of the question. After we got them set up, we walked back until we were out of that wind and fished from there. Don showed me where a couple coyotes had walked through there the night, ’cause those weren’t there the day before. It wasn’t long before three guys arrived in a pickup, and all their gear in back. Evidently, they had loaded that truck after they put the quad runner in it, because when they took it off, there was crap flying everywhere. They hooked up two portable shanties behind and two cases of beer in the front, and it looked like those guys were going to have a great day fishing. We had been offered a couple portable shanties, but for some reason, I didn’t take him up on it, next time I will. One of Don’s tip-up’s sprang once, but that was all the action we saw. Getting fish for dinner wasn’t a problem anyway, Don brought along 6 Walleye fillets.

   As soon as we got back, Doug and I started getting that night’s wood together, and Don stoked the fire. After our chores were done, we all sat at the kitchen table and discussed the attributes of the First Amemdment, and of Art, in an Eckerman sort of way, and watched the bai….er, “Tree hugger pile”. It’s wonderfull to set and watch the finch’s and the blue-jays come to share in our joy of helping them. It’s very rude though, when an evil and malicious bushy tailed rat comes along to terrorize our fine feathered friends. We discussed for a bit about the animal’s feelings toward’s birds, and human’s, and anything good and clean, but Don’s a man of action! Don jumped to his feet, ran to his bedroom and came out with a “Vengence is mine, sayith the Lord” look on his face, and a shotgun in his hand. Doug and I watched that evil, malicious rat, terrorize those poor beautiful birds until we watched it’s sorry ass go staight up and flip over. Don placed the critter splayed over a snowbank as a warning to all those still foolish enough not to share nice. Believe it or not, but that animal showed up later clinging to the kitchen window. We brought her in and no sooner there, than she started to eat some beaver meat that was left from before. I’ve got the pictures! Anyway, after we finally got rid of her, the afternoon progressed very nicely and even improved when Doug walked in.

   We had been talking earlier about the several Eckerman trips we’ve made and how much fun it was during those trap shoots. There was still a box of clay pigeons in the corner so we gave it a try. It was no big deal to Don, he had a shotgun, Doug and I had .22’s. I grabbed the thrower and asked Don where he missed birds the most, and he said when they get to the trees, so I started throwin’ ‘em into the tree tops. I asked Doug where he had a problem and he said as they fly through the brush, so I threw them into the bush’s. After a couple attempts Doug got one in the bush and Don shot two in the trees. I had NO luck..again, so I took it out on a tree top. I picked the uppermost apicalmeristem of a Spruce tree and removed it. Tree huggers shouldn’t worry, it was asleep and didn’t feel a thing.

   The remainder of the evening was spent discussing World politic’s, religon, and Oprah. Nah, we talked about Sex, Eating, and Hunting, and once again, maybe not in that order. It didn’t get nearly as cold that night as the night before, so it wasn’t quite that painfull on the visit to the shathouse. This was the morning too, when I was suppose to supply the venison tenderloins for breakfast. But no, I’d left them in the fridge at home defrosting so Don cooked up some ham I’d brought for sandwich’s, along with some links. Eaten as a single slice this ham was pretty good, but when it was all cooked together, the salt was unbearable. I have no idea how Don ate it, so he musta been really hungry. We were figuring on leaving around Noon, but by 9 the place was all cleaned up and the truck packed, so we left early.

   We had a great weekend, and look forward to getting back. Next trip though, we need a couple shanty’s, a quad runner, and more corn.

05 Dec ‘06

Tuesday, December 5th, 2006

   I went out to Don’s parents home yesterday along with Don to check out my muzzle loader. After some misfires and a couple ‘what the hells?’, it worked out pretty good. After firing a percussion cap, we loaded it up and gave it a try. We got the snap, but nothing followed it, no boom. “Great” I thought, “What the hell do we do now”. We used three more caps without any luck and Don decided to do it the B.B. way. He took off the nipple and poured some powder in that little hole and tried it again. This time there was a snap, followed by nothing, followed by a BOOM! I’d heard that you have to hold it very still inbetween the snap and the ignition of the powder, but the delay was more than a second. One second in time would seem to be a short period, but when your holding a bead on a target, it felt like an eternity. At least it worked this time so we re-loaded it. The next shot fired was instantanious, and my sight picture was good, so we tried it again. He increased the charge some, from 80 grains to 90 and I could feel the difference in it’s recoil. My sight picture was good once again, so we walked down range and had a look. Both shots were at 6 o’clock and 6″ low. We were shooting at 75 yards so Don was pretty happy with the results. Most of our shots won’t be that far when we get to Eckerman so it looks like I’m in business. If I get a shot at 75 yards or farther, I’ll just put the post a little high in it’s shoulder area and I should have me my deer!

02 Dec ‘06

Saturday, December 2nd, 2006

   Well, it’s started. When I drove Jan to work yesterday, the grass was semi-green and the rest of the world was semi-brown. Around 11:20am it started to snow, and it snowed, and snowed, and snowed. By 5:20 it was over and we had 10″ of snow on the ground. I watched the weather channel this morning and the forecast calls for snow every day for the next week, and temperatures never getting above freezing. I’m hoping that we can score a couple nights where it gets real cold and no wind. If that happens, we could be ice fishing by Christmas, if it continues to snow, it’ll be mid January before we can get on the ice. It snows up here so hard most years that the snow doesn’t melt as it hits the lakes, and we end up with white ice. A couple years ago, Doug got me out on the crap for some fishing, and the ice bounced as we walked on it. I’m a big fan of ice fishing, hell, I’d rather do that than sit in a boat, but it’s a little un-nerving when we have to be roped together to walk out there.

   This weekend Don, B.B., Jamie, Doug and myself are going up to Eckerman for some deer hunting using the muzzle loaders. Doug’s taking up a couple deer blinds so we don’t have to set under some Hemlock and freeze our butts off. Back in the day, I could sit out there all day long and watch the snow pile up over me, but not anymore. I don’t think the U.P. got as much snow as we did, so we stand a chance of getting back to the runways. Two years ago, the guys went up and were treated to a day of “Winter wonderland”. They didn’t have any problems at all getting back into the woods but there was some doubt whether they were going to get out or not. Doug told me that the visiblity was down to 3′ for most of the day, but wouldn’t trade it for all the venison in the world. Don ended up taking a shot at a nice buck but it snowed so hard the blood trail was covered within minutes. B.B. took his GPS unit and a radio off into the bush trying to track it, but after a couple hours and crossing two rivers, he gave up. Don told me yesterday that a friend of his was there for the last couple days of the regular rifle season, but all he saw were moose. What a sight that would have been!

   Today, I’m going out to Doug’s and see if he can show me how to operate one of these muzzle loaders, and maybe I can make ammends of not getting a bear this year. I’ll let ya know how it goes.

21 July ‘06

Friday, July 21st, 2006

   Today is my younger brother’s 45th birthday, Happy Birthday Jimi!, and congratulations to my son-in-law John. He received his commerical flying license today!

I got a phone call from Don Zipp yesterday looking for some assistance, Eckerman almost got blown off the map last week. His Mom and Dad went up to just hang out for awhile and couldn’t even get into the driveway. At first Don was going to call FEMA but he doesn’t want a little trailer to live in, he just wants to get rid of a bunch of trees. He’s going up early tomorrow morning, and if I can get a ride for Jan, Doug and I will be going up later in the morning. At first we were going to go up to get the blind ready for bear season, but we may have some work to do before we can even think of heading back into the bush. From the sound of it, there are a lot of trees in the yard, and we should have pleanty enough for camp fires in September.

   Tuesday I went back over to the V.A. clinic in Gaylord for some blood work. The V.A. will be paying for some medication that prevents clotting, so I had to get that squared away. Next Tuesday I go back to see a Social Worker, and then after that back to see the Shrink again. It’s almost done. Next Thursday I take Mark back to the Orthapedic Surgeon to see if he can get along without his splint.  Everything seems to be healing up very nicely and he’s getting around a lot better than I thought he would.

   I find myself thinking about the bear hunt more and more. Where I’ll set, which direction the bear will be coming from, what the bullet trajectery will be from an elivation. Where I’ll set up the tent, and how I’ll place the tarp’s over the top of it. The food, the clothing and the gear. It’s like this every year about this time, and Jan’s already started asking me why I keep staring off into space. Fortunatly, Jan and Mark’ll be going down to Arkansas while I’m in Eckerman, so they’ll be getting as excited as I get as things get closer.