By
this point, our group of “kids” was older, and the total number of campers was thinned out
further, giving us more firsthand experiences of the “grown up” game play. Besides
standards of five card draw and seven card stud, I learned the rules of a
couple new gambling pastimes well before playing poker while confusing Nick’s friends with drunken explanations of laser powered spacecraft.
Determining
how long to stay in the game based on early cards supplied and revealed was …
Less
easy.
Johanna
regularly had cards that could pan out for huge triumph or utter failure. Richie
attempted to transfer his wisdom from years of above average success in poker
to her. His knowledge was respected due to everyone's knowledge of him frequently coming out ahead in the men's games. (Yet he still frowned.)
Dad was less successful. in fact Linda apologized for inviting my folks to that first Christmas/ poker night gathering. Dad found the situation acceptable due to his close bonds of friendship and enjoyment of "quality time" with Rich and the others There was also the fact that any time Dad came out
ahead, something in the house or car of equal or greater value would break.
Richie frequently imparted his wisdom to Johanna by informing her she had to stay in the game that round because she held “an iffy.”
Johanna
would usually respond above the already considerable volume of the room with,
“AN
IFFY!
WHAT’S AN IFFY?
ANOTHER FRIGGIN’ IFFY!”
Then,
when the iffy would invariably not pan out, Johanna would once again increase
my vocabulary with other words featuring the letter “F” in various
combinations.
Aside-
For a while in the later years, Mah Jong joined in the rotation. This might as
well have been a card game. There were suits, and the tiles were handled very much like a card
game. That card game is Fizzbin.
I am convinced William Shatner saw someone
playing Mah Jong before his famous, fabulous improvisation in “Piece of the Action.” I mean, you literally have to
mail away for the annual rules changes, on top of all the weird shifts and
requirements mid-game.
Between Winds, Dragons, Bams, and Cracks, game play
sounded like a mix of a fireworks catalogue and a Batman episode.
As,
um,
not-always, I
guess,
Labor Day Weekend was unseasonably warm.
The
start and end of “official” summer time was marked with the Fourth of July and
Labor Day Parties. They were similar as they involved an ungodly amount of
barbecuing and other supplied food, plus a huge drinks table. The poker playing men really
ran the show, doing the grilling, the serving, the bartending and heading out
for a MASSIVE shopping trip, orchestrated by George, the afternoon of the
gathering.
It
varied a bit before and after, but for the longest stretch of the Crew Men run
parties, Fourth of July was at Schumi’s and Labor Day was at Johanna’s. They
were the two camps with the largest flat areas to fit people and conveniently
located fireplaces to allow both easy refilling of food trays due to congregation of people around the fire without getting in the way of
the never-ending buffet.
I
am not kidding about this. It would start before seven featuring multiple trays of everyone’s specialties, with hot dogs, sausage, bratwurst and hamburgers on the grill.
As the night progressed, Janice would head to her cabin with Linda and come
back with pizza or zeppoles…or both. Phyllis and Johanna would carry over a pot
of macaroni. Joe usually spent the night shucking raw clams...and singing. At around midnight, they’d throw
the steaks on the grill. That was about the time the Cavalcade of Desserts
Parade would appear, where Mom’s work would feature.
It
was glorious.
Due
to the other traditional activities of that day, the Fourth of July party
usually had multiple brushes with chaos. Due to the cold, September,
wilderness, mountain air- Labor Day was normally much more sedate.
Granted,
that’s the “Italians from the Bronx” definition of sedate. It usually
included conversations held well above safe decibel levels, and constant
infusions of rat pack or rock n’ roll music which invariably led to singing
along and dancing. Even without a radio, spontaneous sing-along’s were
constant, random, and often featured multiple tunes simultaneously.
However,
the far hotter than usual weather, and that being the officially designated
summer of parental water fights, formed into a great shenanigonjuction never seen before
or after.
In
all likelihood, it started with Janice sending Nick (and therefore us) to fetch
water guns once more. Nick was always up to shenanigan-again. The Andes Mountain slope like
escalation and outcome obscures the origin somewhat.
Unusual
for this level of shenaniganation, my Mother was involved in the upgrade from a simple water fight to something beyond. As various methods of water
distribution were employed…
And
Louise made a hasty excuse that her Mother needed to go to bed and left
Johanna’s campsite plateau in a rush.
Mom
spied something.
What
she spied was Richie, readying an excessively large water basin to douse one of
her fellow female Crew members as they exited the kitchen armed and ready to return to the fray. The only thing Mom
had on hand to mount a defense was the container of milk for the coffee. She
tossed it on Rich, and in his own words, “I could feel it curdle on me.”
He
grabbed for the milk, and in the struggle, it spilled all over both of them.
The line had been crossed.
With
the transition accomplished, the campsite quickly became an uncontrolled
typhoon of various food and beverage substances.
Nick,
being a professional shenaniganator, believed the expanding chaos gave him free
reign to join in without retribution. He tossed a small cup of water he’d mixed
mustard into on Schumi’s ever present undershirt.
The
next thing I knew, Nick was in a headlock, on the receiving end of a Mr. and
Mrs. T Bloody Mary Mix shampoo. “I pity the fool” indeed.
Things
spiraled quickly further out of control, and tables were emptied if not completely
overturned. In the ensuing kerfuffle, someone (Janice, right? It had to be
Janice, with Phyllis and Linda prodding her on) disengaged from the combat long
enough to return and distribute eggs.
Our cousin Richard was visiting with a friend who hadn't seen normal Lake
shenanigans, never mind the night we were at our shenanigest. He was standing
out of range of the evening, enjoying the show. Janice noticed, and ran over
proclaiming loudly:
The line had been crossed.
“Look at you laughing!
You think you’re safe because you’re
here with your friend and we don’t know him well?!?!
You think this is funny?!?!?
You think you’re not involved?!?!?”
Then she smashed an egg directly on top of Richard’s head.
She
later admitted, “I couldn’t do the friend, but I could do Richard!”
More proof that Up the Lake creates a unique and special bond.
In addition, proof that Richard’s friend was exceptionally tall, and Janice couldn’t have achieved as satisfying a blow on the top of his head.
By the time it wound down, everyone
was covered with the entire contents of the evening’s enormous spread of food,
drink and condiments.
As
punishment for her role as shenanignitiator, Janice was seated into one of the myriad
coolers by some of the frowning poker players, who made a salad on her head complete with multiple dressings, ketchup, mustard, whatever- and dumped the contents of a
second cooler (which was far beyond ice and water at that point) over her.
As
we all stood amidst the food stained wreckage, one thing was abundantly
clear.
Everybody smelled like vegetable soup that passed its expiration date.
Mom
packed as many people as possible into her station wagon, and along with a gang of walkers, we all went down to the beach on this extremely
late evening. She parked the car at the top of the sand, allowing her
headlights to illuminate the swim area. The abnormally hot days meant the water
was warm enough to have a layer of steam rising from it on the cooler weekend night, and
it was delightfully comfortable.
In
an outstanding coincidence, all of our across the Lake neighbors woke up at the
exact same time as our swim. We knew this since we saw their house lights illuminate in series, like a
Christmas display of insomnia.
The
back of Mom’s car smelled like Sunday gravy for a month.
More proof that Up the Lake creates a unique and special bond.
In addition, proof that Richard’s friend was exceptionally tall, and Janice couldn’t have achieved as satisfying a blow on the top of his head.
Everybody smelled like vegetable soup that passed its expiration date.
2 comments:
Some of this would make really good movie scenes...I mean the type that go into the movie trailers.
Thank you very much. As a indication of how long I've been writing about Up the Lake, "Little" Rich said he should be played by Mel Gibson if a movie was ever made.
I'm not sure Mel would stick a cinnamon tic tac up his nose though.
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