When
I posted the newest Up the Lake tale I was looking to link to a detailed reference to “the
weeds” I knew I had written.
After digging in ancient folders I learned I never posted this long lost tale.
Sherman, set the Wayback machine for Labor
Day Weekend Up the Lake, 1997.
N-joy!!!
Mediocre Moments in Naval Warfare
Or...
Not to Be Used as a Flotation Device
Trafalgar...Hastings...Midway...all
famous and memorable sea battles.
Mediocre Moments in Naval Warfare
Or...
Not to Be Used as a Flotation Device
None of these however can compare with the
sheer oddity of the inflatable raft duel which took place early September, Up the Lake. The weekend almost seemed
like it would go by without incident. Miraculously, there was an event where three bee-bee guns and a slingshot were
being used simultaneously without a single near fatal accident.
Click
here or here for the early volumes of the upcoming series “Up the Lake BB Gun
Disasters - Volumes 1 -359."
On
Sunday afternoon, the last full day of the true summer, the Lake had reached
its end of the season temperature brought on by frigid pre-fall mountain
wilderness nights. The cold water caused
instantaneous numbness, cramps, and rigor mortis upon diving under the surface. Therefore, I elected to stay on shore and
peacefully read Sun-Tzu while all the kids, natrually immune to frigid swimming conditions, were in the water.
However,
as it was the final weekend, a medium sized horde of Bronx born Italian
families descended on the beach to see each other before the place closed for
the year, and discuss all the stuff they used to do up there back when they were
physically able.
Apparently, every Italian in America can trace their lineage to a four block neighborhood
in the Bronx. Due to the sound of the
constant boiling of gravy, frying of meatballs, and impacting of wooden spoons
on children’s heads, everyone on those blocks had to talk at maximum volume to be heard. Due to practice and genetics, even in the
peace of the woods, this volume level of speech remained. In fact the only way to
differentiate true yelling from conversation, was that the teeth were clenched
during yelling, actually lowering the volume.
After
reading the same sentence for the fifty-third time, I decided that Ancient
Chinese Philosophy was no match for Middle-Aged Reminiscing Italians, and went
for a swim. After the initial “sneak up
under the raft using fins and scare the heck out of the kids” which is expected
and served as a recognized greeting, the
battle lines were quickly defined, and the war began out in the deep middle of
the Lake.
Aside-
For many years, no true definition of the depth of the center of the Lake was recognized. General legend was that the cold, spring fed
depths were “bottomless” due to it being a filled in prehistoric volcano. Later, non "Up the Lake Side of the Family" maintenance workers used an electric fish finder (clearly establishing themselves as “cheaters”) and claimed the depth was somewhere between thirty and fifty feet. Since they were clearly unromantic
poopyheads, and not “of the body” we true Up the Lakers did not accept the
accuracy of their equipment’s output and maintained the “bottomless”
definition.
But
now, back to the Battle of Labor Day Weekend.
The
attackers were: Joe and Joey (both around 9) led by a theoretical adult.
The
names are no coincidence. One of the other side effects of having this many
traditional Bronx descended Italians, is that Up The Lake had more “Little Joes” than a Bonanza marathon.
1) No gas motors allowed in the Lake,
2) A good pair of fins,
and
3) My big ole feet,
Discounting a canoe, kayak, or old lady who saw a snake in the water, from my late teens until well into my thirties, I was the fastest moving human over short distances in that body of water.
One of the Joe’s swam straight ahead at the Battle Platform while their “leader” and the other Joe flanked (flunk?) around both sides on the Attack Rafts in a pincer maneuver.
2 comments:
Hastings? A sea battle?
Also - Depth of the lake when measured with a water level indicator was approximately 70 feet at the deepest part. Probably cheating as well, but it was entertaining watching all the Italians wonder amongst themselves "Why the hell is that weird guy duct taping a chunk of rebar to that f*****g strange tape measure?" in what I'm sure was supposed to be a whisper, but which I am pretty sure I heard twice, from the echo coming off the mountain on the other side of the lake.
Dave
For the first comment.
"Forget it he's rolling."
and for the second part:
"I'm sorry I do not speak your language."
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