In
fact Skip's two sisters did this for an entire fun filled evening boat ride
once, fortunately the water absorbed some sound, and we suffered no permanent
hearing loss on the frantic trip back, where I believe three of us tried to row
a single boat simultaneously for maximum acceleration.
Most
of the long term Up the Lakers enjoyed the spectacle. Although it is very peaceful to commune with
nature as you watch the flitting about in the evening air of the only mammals
capable of true flight…
Not
counting a hamster in a slingshot, of course…
There
just aren't enough of the little flitters for honest high powered entertainment
value.
This
led to the well planned method of tossing a rock straight into the air, leading
a bat to mistake it for a bug, and chase it as it fell.
The
intention was to provide us with an excellent close up view of one of nature's
most interesting creatures.
I’m
certain we would have gotten many a magnificent sighting of those winged
marvels of nature; if we weren't so busy dodging the rocks.
On
one late night fishing trip, Skip had a bat chase his lure as he did a high
cast. The location of the evenings
quarry instantly switched from below to above the boat. The fun of the tossing sharp objects above
our heads culminated with the group of us hurling fully opened Swiss
army knives into the air over the beach, in hopes of gaining a proud
trophy.
Completely
unsurprisingly, no bats lost their lives that evening.
Completely
surprisingly, the same can be said of the children.
Some
of us liked the nocturnal flyers so much we decided to emulate them. Almost every day one summer, three of us
would play "Bats" on the beach.
Our towels would go over our shoulders and we'd run around flapping.
Stop
judging. Come on, like you never did
this?
We
each had a logical name as well:
Diane
was "Nutbat": due to her Planters towel.
Danny
was “Dingbat”: most likely because he actually tried to fly over the Lake, with
less than impressive, or dry, results.
Lastly,
I was "Mushbat" because I would jump up and down on stuff and go
"MUSH" for reasons which were totally logical at the time, but seem
to have slipped my mind at the moment, along with the reasons for the whole
game in general, and the reasons for actually admitting it publicly.
While
loved by many at night, bats caused several near heart attacks by popping up
unexpectedly during the day.
My
cousin had a furry flying friend pop out at him while removing the covering
board from his bedroom cabin’s window, and made it to the top of the tree stump
ten feet away in two seconds flat.
The
truly amazing part is he was on a twenty foot ladder working on the
window...never touched a rung.
My
Dad was honored with one of the earliest confirmed sightings of a flying
squirrel. He didn’t truly appreciate the
honor, however, as the sighting occurred when he opened the tool shed and the
thing barnstormed his head.
My
sister, Kim, and Tracy also got quite a jolt one afternoon down the Lake when
they asked me to see if there was a mouse behind the clock on the water
shed. Protective older brother that I
am, I peeked around the left side and saw nothing, so I pulled the clock
down. This would be when the bat began
his attack sortie from behind the right side of the clock. I didn’t have time
to move much as it whipped by me, and directly at the two young girls, who hit
the beach like they were intent on saving Private Ryan (or at least their
hair).
Kim
was also by the same water shed when a bunch of us heard an odd
screeching/creaking noise coming from behind the rules sign. Peering over I saw a copperhead slithering
its way from the roof behind the sign. I
figured (because I must have swam too much and deprived my brain of oxygen)
that the snake was causing the board to push against its nails and make the
sound. Being the oldest, I grabbed the
standard, Up the Lake, Anti-poisonous reptile at the beach armament which my
mother had used on many occasions. No
not a shovel this time, an oar. Note that this only applied to the venom filled
slitherers. A lengthy, if slightly bent,
black snake I named Lumpy (pictured above) and its many projeny (pictured here),
lived
in harmony (minus the occasional panicked scream) around our cabin for a summer.
Back
to the dangerous one: a swift jab at the exposed section of the serpent caused
it to drop into a flumphing pile.
Kim
helped everyone stay calm and me to focus by screaming and running around in
circles.
The
source of the sound was then revealed to be the bat that the copperhead was
trying to eat, which greatly increased the volume and pitch of the screams of
terror which I had ascribed to bending wood.
Kim
helped everyone stay calm and me to focus by screaming and running around in
circles.
I
hit the snake a couple more times to push it away from the group of kids, which
had the secondary effect of it dropping the bat.
Kim
helped everyone stay calm and me to focus by screaming and running around in
circles.
I
then proceeded to dispatch the snake to insure it would not bring its venom
filled head near the young campers who frequently got drinks and washed their
feet at the water shed.
Kim
helped everyone stay calm and me to focus by screaming and running around in
circles.
I
then carried the broken body of the no longer dangerous creature on the oar to
toss into the woods.
Kim
helped everyone stay calm and me to focus by screaming and running around in
circles.
Finally,
the little bat crawled, flopped and bounced its way to the nearest tree to
climb to safety.
Before
Kim screaming and running in circles could accidentally step on it.
Up the Lake Index
2 comments:
I did not step on it.... if I did, I'd still be screaming and running around in circles.... unless of course I did, and you knew that so you didn't tell me that I did.... AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!
Sorry, poor word choice on my part. I meant to convey it flolloped away BEFORE you could step on it. I fixed it now.
Thanx for reading, posting, and running in circles and screaming to add highlights to my stories.
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