photo


5
Apr 12

There are at least three ways to spell “triple”

Meetings. Meetings about copyright laws. Meetings about stories. Meetings about meetings, at least two conversations worth. And then the emails. Emails about inventory. Emails about recruiting. And then there was a meeting about email. And, finally, emails about meetings.

That kind of day.

I took the long way home.

Somewhere in the middle of nowhere, between Calera and Jemison, Ala.:

tree

They’ve moved! But their new location has the same chicken and the same chili. And you know they are good because they’ve deliberately misspelled both words. But don’t go in the old Dari-Delite. The recipes are not there. This is in Clanton, Ala.:

Dari-Delite

This is a fairly common misspelling if you search the Googles. But you don’t expect to see it quite so … large. Shame this Prattville, Ala. shop is closed, I’d loved to have walked inside and innocently asked them if they’d noticed anything odd about the sign. Or if Mr. Tripple was in today. Even for a muffler man this has to be galling.

The nine A’s though? That’s just brilliant:

Dari-Delite

Got my bike back from the shop. It now sports two shiny new shifter covers, a new chain and a tightened cassette.

So that will take care of the safety of my hands, a needed replacement — the old chain was starting to stretch and impacting performance — and fixed an obnoxious rattle on country roads.

The lady that runs the place offered to sell me a new seat because she’d noticed my saddle was giving way. When I bought the bike, used, there was one small tear. I recently rubbed two new spots on it in a stupid decision.

She said she’d just purchased a Felt herself, maybe that’s why she asked me about mine earlier this week, and couldn’t use this saddle.

“What am I going to do with an orange seat?” she said she’d asked herself.

And then through the door walks this sap, orange Felt with a frayed seat.

Saddles are a bit personal, though. She offered it to me for $20, and I talked her into a test ride. I’ll try it this weekend and buy it or return it. I gave her my business card, saying “If you don’t hear from me … ”

Turns out her husband works at Samford too. Small world, big bicycle.


4
Apr 12

Biscuits, rust and authors

The second-biggest problem with the camera in the iPhone is the depth of field. This looks like a lot more food than it really is.

biscuit

But, then again, there’s the app that let’s you blur out everything but your focus. (And that biscuit was delicious.) There are also apps that turn your HDR photo into HDRerer, which makes rust look magestic. This is through my dirty windshield, in an oddly lit part of the day, so it doesn’t pop as it could, but:

Jeep

Think that guy is a beach bum in training? His flip flops do.

To see the real work of an HDR app, consider this picture from a few years ago:

MommaGs

And here’s the treatment:

MommaGs

It really jumps, doesn’t it?

There’s no real particular point to that, other than to say that I had a biscuit for lunch. If you didn’t, you should have. And also, the amount rest of the food really wasn’t that impressive. I’m blaming the frame of the barbecue chicken. The biscuit was the best part, though.

We had a bestseller speak in our class today. Nancy Dorman-Hickson co-wrote the biography on Joanne King Herring, who is a icon of the Republican party in Texas. You might recall her from Charlie Wilson’s War, which demonstrated her role in drumming up support for the United States’ proxy role in the Russo-Afghanistan war:

She was upset, Hickson said, by how overtly sexual she was portrayed in the movie. She is a gentile, Southern lady and so on.

Hickson was great in the class where she talked about freelancing and becoming a book author. She said she got that book contract, in part, because Herring’s people Googled “Southern writer” and “Christian.” And when they did, a small magazine piece she wrote on a Lutheran church event got her foot in the door.

There was a small handful of writers they decided to try out. The prospective authors were to have a phone conversation with Herring, and from there write one of her stories, trying to capture her tone and rhythm.

Hickson says “She was to share one story. Joanne is Southern. Multiple stories ensued.”

Well, yeah. That’s as natural as biscuits.


31
Mar 12

A story about life, memories of the dead

On a beautiful, warm day in a quiet little unincorporated community to the northwest of Atlanta they gather to remember a horrifically stormy day 35 years ago. It would be the last, fatal flight of Southern 242.

It is thought to be one of the largest and longest running survivor group memorials of its kind. The older gentleman there is running the show. He’s a local boy, growing up literally just down the road from this place in a time when the only thing modern eyes would recognize was the cemetery. When he was a boy the church across the street was different. There were two sawmills, a log cabin school and a general store his family ran.

This place was important because it is a crossroads, but then this place had always been important. The place and the people there grew up knowing about loss and tragic death. Long before even the old man was born this was the site of one of the last battles before Sherman marched on Atlanta. More than 2,000 soldiers died only a stone’s throw away from this place.

But on this day they gathered to recall something that “seems like only a few months ago.”

marker

marker

A violent storm, part of a system that killed at least two dozen in Alabama, knocked a plane out of the sky. In the official analysis there was a long list of problems. The weather report was outdated. The storm rendered the plane’s weather radar useless. The pilot, an Army Air Corps veteran, reported baseball-sized hail cracked his cockpit windows. A bad command from air traffic contributed to ruining the plane’s engines. The pilots made a costly detour. Finally the DC-9, with 85 souls on board, was reduced to a glider for seven minutes. They would try to land on this sleepy road in rural Georgia.

It doesn’t look much like it did back then, the old man tells you. The intersection of the vital crossroad has been reshaped. There was a bit of a commercial boom at the turn of the century bringing in pharmacies, a grocery store and other strip mall inhabitants. In the 1970s it was just this road, that school, a gas station and the barbecue restaurant.

The pilots of the plane found this long stretch of road and hoped for the best. The co-pilot was a naval aviator. He’d put fighter planes on the pitching deck of blacked out aircraft carriers in the South China Sea, but this was a different kind of challenge. He got the plane on the road, with the wheels on the center line as the locals recall, but his wings clipped power poles, a fence and trees. The plane careened out of control. It crushed a car with seven people — three mothers and their four children, in an instant, a family lost two daughters and all of their grandchildren — and killed two other locals. The fuselage sliced through the gas station. Then the explosions started.

It came to rest in this lady’s yard:

Sadie

Ms. Sadie had just called her children inside because of the coming storm. Now there was a fireball where her kids so often played.

Because it is a crossroads, and was even smaller back then, the emergency help had to come from all over the region. They found they could get close, but could not get to the scene because the wreck itself had damaged so much of the roadway. The community, neighbors and friends and normal folks, found themselves trying to bring order to unholy chaos. The scene looked liked this some time later:

The people at the memorial remembered how they carried people out “the back way,” meaning through Ms. Sadie’s house. The people who could walk or be carried went through her front door, out the back and through the woods at Hell Hole, where that Civil War battle was fought, and to the neighboring street.

Everyone that made it into the house survived. The locals tell stories of getting the victims out using doors as stretchers and cutting people free of their seats with their pocketknives. They recall covering bodies in curtains and sheets and finding tubs of ice and water for burn victims.

Some of the survivors that have made the trip back stand to talk, remember, thank and grieve a bit.

He was on row 19, the next-to-last row of seats on the plane. He was an 18-year-old soldier when the plane crashed. Now he works in Customs. He’s got a wife, a young daughter intent on picking every flower at the cemetery where this memorial is held and a story to tell:

They all do. Twenty-two people on the plane lived, but their numbers are starting to dwindle. There were Guardsmen, lawyers and homemakers. At least three of the survivors died recently. One of whom survived near-fatal injuries in World War II and this crash and died just last year, at 86. Another survivor was also a World War II veteran who worked in forestry and construction. He lost a leg in the crash, but it never kept him off his motorcycle. He died last year at 96. Another had been in and out of hospitals every year since the crash, but she raised a huge family, too. She died last year at 71, leaving 17 grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. Her family asked for memorial donations to be made to the burn unit in Atlanta that treated her decades ago.

At least two books have been written about the disaster. One by one of the flight attendants, who began helping train the airline liaison officers who work with the families of crash victims and survivors.

“Nobody should have to go through that alone,” she said.

Back then, they say, people were just told to return to their lives. Even the locals who ran toward the smell of smoke and the crackle of the flames found that a difficult task. One man said he didn’t eat for a week. Another said he could only eat in darkness for a long time after the accident. Another man who dug through the debris didn’t sleep for days. There didn’t seem to be much of a normal thing to return to for a long while. It would be a long time before they could hear the sound of a plane and not look up.

But in grief there is joy. In pain, there is growth. The flight attendant marvels at how they found themselves in a place called “New Hope … New … Hope.”

The survivors single her out as a hero. All of 24 years old at the time, she’s struggled with that day for years, but on this point she is adamant: New Hope.

The people of the community who remember that day understand her meaning in their bones. Over the years they’ve found themselves bonded with total strangers in the aftermath. That’s been part of their healing, seen in part by the Southern 242 Memorial Committee, which is raising money to install a proper memorial.

The people there learned firsthand how things like this change a person, can change an entire community. One man worked at a bank at the time. He’s now a preacher. Another worked on the railroad. He now owns an ambulance company. The local pharmacist changed careers and became a doctor after tending to the injured. One of the survivors from the plane crash left the budding software industry and devoted his life to counseling.

The lady that found a plane in her yard raised her kids and, now a senior citizen, will graduate in May with her degree in psychology. Inspired by that stormy day in 1977, she’s still trying to give help and hope to others.

Now to be personal about it: my grandfather is one of the names on that plaque, just another person that had probably never even heard of New Hope. The plane crashed just a few months after I was born, so this story has always been casting ripples in our family life, but this was the first time I’ve been to the site and placed scenery with the details.

They said he was killed instantly, still just the smallest of comforts for the family of a man struck down at 42.

He was a new grandfather, but an old preacher. I have the Bible from which he gave his first sermon, at the age of 16. As a newborn I was there for one of his last sermons.

Ms. Sadie, the homeowner, has become a lifetime friend for my mother, who lost her father as she tended an infant. Ms. Sadie says they pulled his last Bible from the debris in a place where everything surrounding it had been destroyed by the flames. The book, they figured, should have been, too. But it was only scorched on the margins.

They found it opened to Psalm 23.


29
Mar 12

Ride right

The road was quiet. Everyone had gotten to where they needed to be.

It was empty enough that when the occasional car came by it seemed to do so apologetically. They knew they were intruding on the empty asphalt and how lonely it should be.

Sun

When the hum of the road is your own noise, and yours alone, that’s worth chasing. That’s the moment you ride for.


25
Mar 12

Catching up

Another beautiful day here, how has your weekend turned out? Hope the weather is lovely, hope you got a dose of this. I hope you don’t mind if we hang on to it for, roughly, ever.

This is the day on the site where I throw a bunch of pictures on here that haven’t otherwise been featured from this week. Sometimes there is context, sometimes there is a theme. Often they are just pictures I thought were worth uploading. Enjoy!

The bird feeder has attracted a couple of sets of cardinals. And now we’ll find out how territorial they are:

Cardinal

Fans at a baseball game. The little one needs a bit of directional practice, but she’ll get there.

fans

They thought it was beach night at the park and so a dozen or so college kids blamed her for talking them into wearing their floral prints. Turns out she was unjustly accused. It was beach night. No one else knew it:

fans

The guy that made our cable and Internet problems all better. For now, at least:

tech

I do a lot of pictures of the cat, so I thought I’d show her off as a watercolor. I was pecking away at something in the library and she was fascinated by the dramatic bird chatter going on just beyond her reach:

Allie

You want fries with that? At Publix:

fries

A sliver of the moon. Jupiter and Venus were shining brightly over it, but the photographs didn’t do it justice. Mine never do:

moon

Freshman Daniel Koger threw three perfect innings today against LSU. He had three unearned runs given up behind him, but he had another solid outing today:

Koger

Aubie is looking for a series sweep:

Aubie

But he would not find it. For the third game in a row LSU-Auburn was in doubt until the last pitch, this one. Kody Ortman had the unenviable task of being put in as a pinch hitter. With the tying run on first Auburn took out a guy that was 2-3 on the day and batting in the .330s for a cold player with about half his average. Ortman hit it well, driving the ball crisply into centerfield:

Ortman

… but the ball was caught, the game was over. LSU avoided being swept by Auburn for the first time since the Reagan administration with the final, 4-3.