Central Park Boat Pond 2024

October 7th 19

Autumn settles on the boat pond
Central Park trees
Green to Orange to Yellow
On the pond
To radio control sloops
race
through fallen leafs__
An imitation
America cup
Both sailing douth
Driven on a crisp northwesterly___
Central Park
Not the East Village
Rosy red cheek children
Race around the pond
At Arm’s Reach
From four nannies
Three young mothers
I remember my youth
Change of seasons
Summer to autumn
I remember the Wind
Through the trees
Of the Blue Hills
Like then
All the colors
So special
The blue of the sky
The white of the clouds
Silver and gray too
And the trees___
Working the color spectrum
From Green yellow to red
Under
The strong sunlight
Hearing the children’s laughter
Remember mine
And my mother’s laughter
So long ago in our backyard
In the Blue Hills.
Laughter
Same as Central Park
Forever young___

Better Late Than Never

Merry Christmas Comrades

I’m even capitalizing the C to maintain the spiritual peace of the winter holidays even though the Christians stole the Yulemas from the ancient Druids of Stonehenge.

Meán Geimhridh commemorating the shortest day of the year predates the Bronze Age. The original rituals from over five thousand years ago have been lost for ages, however every December the sun signals the winter solstice at the Newgrange burial tomb. For seventeen minutes the rays of the dawn pierce a hole in the roof to light the interior of the Neolithic monument. Farmers slaughtered their livestock in preparation for a long winter and more importantly wine, beer, mead, and other spirits reached maturity in late-December.

The pagans had a very happy Meán Geimhridh.

Julius Caesar adapted his Julian calendar to mark December 25 as the winter solstice and later the Christians adopted this heathen feast for their own religion.

Meán Geimhridh was all about the sun and earth and beer and the eternity of the cosmos.

So milla failte to my loving son Fenway in Thailand.

An ancient tribe loves you always.

mas.

He is a good boy.

The Paganism Of The Christmas

Eight years ago I woke at 3:33 AM to view the first winter solstice lunar eclipse. I climbed out onto the roof of the Fort Greene Observatory and lifted my eyes to the heavens. A sliver of silver topped the Earth’s satellite. I stripped naked to bathe in the light of the sun off the moon. The frost on my skin was the only human sacrifice within sight. After thirty seconds I retreated within the Observatory and shivered myself to sleep.

Today is also the shortest day of the year and this morning I woke at 7:14.

Several years ago I had been homeless and after an extended tour of parks, bridges, and couches, I moved to Myrtle Avenue across the Fort Greene Park. On December 21st I climbed onto the roof at 7:15. The sun peeped over East Brooklyn at 7:16. The temperature was 31 F. I stripped off my clothing and faced the sun. My skin surrendered to the cold by 7:17 and I retreated with haste from the winter’s solstice, wishing I was dancing around a blazing bonfire with a pagan horde celebrating the solstice in languages no longer known to history, but settled for a retreat from the first day of winter.

Few people in the modern age and even fewer Christian realize that Christmas had been lifted from the ancient Druid’s Alban Arthan or the Lighting of the Shore celebration of the rebirth of the sun. The Celtic holiday feast also coincided with the final stages of fermentation of wine and beer.

My friend the ex-model from Paris abhorred Christmas as an orgy festival. Brigitte is a devout fundamentalist. To her the Bible is fact and she wrote on Facebook.

“Christmas is a disgusting pagan holiday that comes from Roman orgies where they would choose a torture scapegoats by forcing them to eat and indulge in all sorts of excess and then brutally murder them.”

She later added, “Some of the most depraved customs of the Saturnalia carnival were intentionally revived by the Catholic Church in 1466 when Pope Paul II, for the amusement of his Roman citizens, forced Jews to race naked through the streets of the city. An eyewitness account reported before they were to run, the Jews were richly fed, so as to make the race more difficult for them and at the same time more amusing for spectators.”

Sounds like a good time had by all.

So happy solstice one and all.

I wish I was drinking beer, but my beer-drinking days are over, so comrades one and all Happy Grianstad.

The Glitter Of Gold

From 2011
In the summer of 1993 Tall Meg and I drove from LA to New York in her 1966 Studebaker Lark. Tall Meg was in love with a man in New York and I was returning to no one. She was in a hurry, but had never made the cross-country trip, so we detoured from the Interstate and headed into the desert. The first night I erred thinking that there were plenty of motel rooms in Monument Valley in Arizona. We arrived at dusk to discover the two motels were sold out. That evening Tall Meg and I crashed in the car parked off the road leading to Colorado. Both of us were too tired to travel any farther.

“At least the seats fold down.” The night was lit by the cosmos. Kerouac and Cassidy might have traveled down this road.

“Don’t say anything.” Tall Meg was pissed at me. It was cold in the high plains. Cars passed every few minutes. I stepped outside and stared at the billions of stars clustered in the sky. I couldn’t recollect ever having seen so many. Tall Meg joined me.

“A lot of stars.” She was still angry at me, but her eyes shined with the heaven.

In the morning we continued on our way. People were happy to see her car.

“What is it?” Most asked at the car stations. Tall Meg told them everything about her car. They waved good-bye and we entered the Rockies, stopping the night at a small hotel in Leadville, the highest city in the USA. We struggled to sleep in the high altitude. My lungs struggled to get my breath. Both of us woke at dawn. The road was downhill from Leadville. By the end of the day we would be in the plains. I stopped at a mountain stream that would become the Arkansas River and thought about swimming until Tall Meg pointing out that the crystal water which would was laden with the poisonous aftermath of gold mine owned by the Newmont Corporation.

“It’s dead.”

“And been dead for a long time.”

Tall Meg and I left the river and I have thought about that sign on the Arkansas since then.

There were few clear streams left in America and the mining entity known as Newmont has moved much of its operations overseas. Last week the Peru government yielded to demands of local residents to stop the development of a massive gold pit in the Cajamarca region some 3700 meters above sea level. Residents had set up roadblocks to prevent any attempt by Newmont to drain glacier-fed lakes to support their mining operation. Newmont had proposed another set of negotiations, dangling the prospect of jobs before the locals. Such promises have been before to the people in Indonesia, Australia, New Zealand, Ghana and Peru with success, for Newmont produced 5.4 million ounces of gold last year. With gold at an all-time high Newmont is the most successful gold mining operation in the world, however the locals living in the shadow of their mines have complained about deadly pollution and the failure to provide well-paid jobs to the community.

Newmont has been ignored these protests with the help of the government who are in the pocket of the mining giant. They have escaped audits for taxes and royalty payment thanks to a legion of lawyers. Managers are adept at short-changing workers overtime in foreign countries and contributed to the danger of mining by avoiding adherence to safety regulations. The CIA has repeatedly acted in favor of Newmont to the detriment of the workers and local communities.

All that glitters might be gold, but that gold is not for everyone.

Not in America and not in Peru.

Montauk Train # 20

Montauk Train # 10

8:18 out of Jamaica
EMD diesel hauling passengers
East
All the way east
To the last stop
Montauk___
Last day of autumn
December 20
Gray morning
Almost winter
34 degrees outside
Comfortable on the train
Another two hours to Montauk
Passing through the Long Island suburbs
Small houses
From the 50s and 60s
For the parents of baby boomers
Fleeing the city
The small apartments
The dirty streets
The others___
Safe clean and space to breathe
Beaches only minutes away
Living the American dream__
Still looks that way
From the 8:18 to Montauk
No one on the streets
Only cars
One deer by a pond
No other sign of life___
I know this life
Suburbs of the South Shore
In the Blue Hills
South of Boston
These houses
So familiar
Even after leaving the suburbs in 1976__
The East Village, London, Paris, Hamburg, Yucatan, LA, Bali, Thailand so many remote places
Far from the suburbs
But not today
Passing empty baseball fields
Still inlets
Strip malls
And a single man
Rummaging through the trash
Behind a convenience store
The suburbs
Just outside the window
Family house, Christmas decorations, empty Street, bare trees, more marshes now
Soon out of the suburbs
On the 8:18 to Montauk__
On the 8:18 to Montauk
Eastward bound__