Battle Along The Columbia

As many of you already know the Bokeh Maru, the Institutes premier research vessel, is a remarkable vehicle. Outfitted with all the modern attributes of a world-class media center and loaded down with sophisticated electronic equipment including GPS, a Smartphone, contact receptacles mounted in the walls that interface with portable electronics like laptops, toasters, handheld devices that remove facial hair and a place to recharge batteries in all the professional photographic gear that is needed on an expedition such as this one. The power source alone that is a regenerative unit that provides nearly an inexhaustible amount of power in the form of AC/DC electricity, requires an advanced degree in mechanical engineering just to turn it on.

But perhaps the greatest and most useful device on board is a portable, slightly oversized, hyper-organic computer with the ability to perform incredible feats of observation and analysis of the conditions around it. Programmed with the latest algorithms and lightning fast calculations it is able to instantly react to stimulus occurring in a 360° radius of its location. That is until it goes on overload, reboots, gives you a blue screen and you crash into the guard rail and spill your tea. Fortunately that didn’t happen but it could of.

It, the organic computer named after the Hal 9000’s cousin Leland, was running its wildlife acquisition app as we sped down I-84 along the Columbia river just east of The Dalles in Oregon, when it suddenly sprang into action after locating life-forms just off the hwy and up a nearly vertical wall of rocks, sand, boulders and scrub. Sensing images to be had I immediately pulled over to the side of the road where fortunately the shoulder was just wide enough that if I nearly scraped the side of the Bokeh Maru against the concrete divider placed there to keep foolish gawkers from falling into the Columbia river, I could get far enough off the roadway to avoid being crushed to death by the semi-truck traffic rocketing by at 70 mph.

The life-forms turned out to be Bighorn Sheep, rams to be exact, that were girding their loins in preparation for the rut which would allow them to have unprotected sex with any female sheep they could coerce into mating behavior. There were 5-7 of these bachelor boys who took turns ramming their heads together (hence the name Rams) to see who would get first pick of any females they might blunder into. Half these guys  were so loopy that they didn’t know which way was up after several rounds of striking their heads together with enough force you could hear it over the sound of 18 wheelers screaming by inches away. Their numbers varied as they came and went, as they did battle, then retreated to take whatever headache remedy they could before returning to the jousts again. This went on for hours, all in all a magnificent display of the ridiculous, I mean, they could’ve just sent a nice bouquet of roadside sage or some tasty twigs they located, then after some small talk and a little wine, they could accomplish what nature intended without all that head-banging and bleating. But that is just a personal opinion and not to be taken as scientific fact.

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Here two of the Bachelor Boys contend for contendership and the right to do this again with someone bigger. The average good-sized ram will weigh between 250 and 300 lbs. with 30 lbs or more of that weight being their horns.

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Contact! They put every ounce of power they have into these moments.

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The impact is so intense that the energy rocketing through their bodies results in one or both of them actually being lifted from the ground. It is impressive to see and one wonders about the longevity of Nature’s crash-test dummies after being subjected to this dozens of times a day. Makes these NFL linemen we hear about today seem like pansy little whiners in comparison with their measly little concussions and all.

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After the immediate impact they stand there motionless, or I might say paralyzed, while they contemplate what just happened. At the moment of impact these 250-300lbs. rams are striking each other at speeds up to 20 mph which is the equivalent of a 250lb man on a fat-tired bike slamming into the concrete wall of a Starbucks at 40 mph. One can only wonder what they might be thinking at this moment.

As a trained observer I have theorized that those thoughts may be something like “Holy crap, did THAT hurt.” or possibly a false sense of bravado with one saying “Didn’t hurt.” and the other one responding “Did too!” or perhaps something along the lines of “Where am I? Better yet, what am I?” While these boys are standing there trying to figure out if they walked to work or carried their lunch, another pair begin the same ritual. These bouts can last up to 24 hrs. before they finally concede its dumb and they go get breakfast somewhere.

Although this was a unique adventure as there was no expectation that wildlife would be spotted in the narrow confines of the Columbia gorge, the real adventure was not getting sideswiped by every semi that came down the highway. The rest was that act of reentering 70 mph traffic from a standing start. For those who have never  driven through the Columbia gorge it is one of the principal entries into the city of Portland and consequently every truck in America is required to go through it, sometimes several times a day. And they, the large, malevolent, evil-smelling ogres of the road, do not like RV’s. Or cars. Or other trucks. They don’t even like their mothers, or Jesus, or Country and Western music, so reentering their domain takes an act of courage that many simply don’t have. But the Bokeh Maru does. She leapt into the fray with never a thought for her soft-bodied passenger inside and fearlessly held up her tail pipe in a obscene gesture in the face of that 90,000lb behemoth bearing down on her and pulled into the traffic lane. We lived.

It was on to bigger and better things as we pointed our broad nose to the west and headed for Portland, the city of narrow roads and high-speed traffic. New adventures awaited us.

Light In The Meadow

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After a mind-clearing journey of over 4000 miles through the Pacific Northwest and Canada I’m back in the Director’s chair here at the Institute. One of the largest conclusions I have come to is that there is an incredible amount of green out there in the Pacific Northwest. Everything is green, from the mighty trees that grow right down to the ocean’s edge to the green eggs and ham I got at a local eatery, it’s green. Many, many shades of green, almost too many if one were forced to make a judgment about it. I like green. Don’t get me wrong, it’s one of my favorite colors, but I had never been inside a green explosion before and it took some getting used to.

The trip was fantastic. The Bokeh Maru seemed to respond to the lighter touch of just one person at the helm instead of the four-hour watch routine we had on our Montana adventure where almost all of the crew took their turns at the wheel. Consequently she performed flawlessly. No hesitation, no refusal to go a where ever I directed her and she seemed to enjoy the new scenery as much as I did. I even began to suspect she may have been there before but being a gentleman I didn’t ask. A lady must have her  secrets.

There were new things to see nearly every minute of the day and it was pure bliss to camp next to the ocean with only a small sand dune separating us from the ability to turn left and head for Japan. The waves were relentless and the sound of the rain on the roof during the night was mesmerizing. As a treat I let the Bokeh Maru wet her wheels in the incoming tide and you could hear her squealing in delight as the salt water washed the remnants of the long road trip from her undercarriage. After we left I watched her closely so that she didn’t surreptitiously try and turn back to the sea.

We traveled through the Columbia gorge, then along the seacoast of Oregon and Washington using the famous highway 101 until we could go no further then loaded on to a car ferry aptly named the USS Scratch and Dump to go to Vancouver Island in Canada. Upon entry I had a chance to visit with the charming and polite customs official who was most interested in whether I had a gun aboard, or owned a gun which might not be aboard, and whether I kept guns in my home here in the USA. An interesting question asked was whether I supported the right to own guns. I answered all the questions as truthfully as I could with, No, No, No, and Hell yes. I t was enough to get me into the sovereign country of Canada but not without some suspicious looks as I slowly eased onto Canadian soil. I was asked about the gun thing by Canadians at several of the campgrounds I stayed in while in Canada. It something that our Canadian friends seemed to be very interested in.

I took a whale watching boat out to see if we could locate Orcas or Killer whales as the more bloodthirsty among us like to call them and we did, plus Humpback whales and a rare white-sided dolphin that had the boat crew all excited. Apparently seeing one of them was akin to seeing a white buffalo here.

I also took the opportunity of making a surprise visit to the new managers of the eastern Oregon satellite office of the Institute. Things are progressing somewhat slowly there as far as the remodeling and refurbishment of the old site goes, but I was assured that as soon as Spring hit they would begin the transformation in earnest. Meanwhile I was fed and watered as one of the family and soon forgot why I had even stopped there in the first place. I even had to stay a second day after the promise of a meal of free-range, fresh cooked fish, Steelhead or it might have been Halibut, that had been swimming freely in the river moments before. I even tried the old trick of feinting extreme malnutrition by sucking my cheeks in and holding a pillow in front of my less than svelte stomach, hoping to get more food the next day but although my new management team lives in a backwater of the Wallowa valley they are smart enough to quickly catch on to my ruse and went out for cigarettes and didn’t return until they saw the end of the Bokeh Maru turn on to the highway. Disappointed but impressed with their ability to spot a flim-flam man I headed back towards Colorado.

We, The Bokeh Maru and I, had been out for nearly three weeks and it was time to get back to work. Before that work could commence however I had to change the color palette in my head from the greens and greys of the Northwest and replace it with the local one so that I was reoriented again. That a meant a quick trip up to Rocky Mountain National Park to firmly plant the yellows and reds and gold that was the aspens and meadows of Fall back in the front of my mind.

The image above is the late afternoon sun streaming through the aspen grove at the edge of Moraine meadow. It was enough to get my mind right again. As time goes by I will be posting images from the trip to the Northwest with the usual accompanying stories that a few of you find interesting. The rest of you that simply look at the pictures then go do something interesting will also not be forgotten as I try and post something to stimulate your attention span. It’s good to be back.

A quick note. As this is a busy time of year for me with the fall color change and the rut happening I will be not be posting every day until I’m home and winter has me locked in. So although I will try my best to get posts out there I will be gone several more times as I try and get the photography done while the opportunity presents itself. Thanks to all of you who patiently put up with my inconsistencies. I will make sure all of  you get entered in my will.

The Maiden Voyage of The Bokeh Maru – Day 14

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Day 14 Final Day

Well, I’m heading down the road on the last day of this epic journey. The sun is shining, there’s virtually no wind, the endless horizon stretches before me calling me homeward with the promise of a night in my own bed, a hot home-cooked meal and a little time to rest and contemplate my life before the next great adventure beckons. The Bokeh Maru is purring along the roadway with the lithe gracefulness of a cheetah with a fleeing Tommy in her sights, her pistons the size of 5 gallon buckets, each pulling in a quart of fuel per cylinder with each rhythmic stroke, a gentle but guttural roar emitting from her exhaust system telling me not to worry she’ll get me home, even if it takes every last dollar left in The Institutes fuel budget this year.

My thoughts are turned to the various experiences and incredible sights I have witnessed on this trip. And if pressed I would have to say that the experience of viewing and being amongst the wild horses of McCullough peaks in the Wyoming wilderness was absolutely the most incredible memory I have. The image above of the stallion surveying his territory sums up everything I think about the West, its wildness, animals, nature, and most of all, its freedom. If you had to come back as something in another life I think being him would not be a bad choice.

As I point the Bokeh Maru southward towards home the circumstances couldn’t be more different this day, from the day we started this journey. We had embarked with an international crew of 31 souls, all with a desire to go forth and see just what this world had to offer. All of them eager for adventure and the lure of the open road. As Director of The Institute and Captain and Commander of this new vessel, The Bokeh Maru, I was probably the most excited of all.

We had Sherpa’s from Nepal and Tibet to scale the highest peaks and tell us what they saw, a crew of sailors led by my head of Security, Big Lemon Kowalski that had been lent to me my Far East Affiliate, Batchu Sen, owner and CEO of South Seas Acquisitions, a firm that specializes in obtaining goods from various sources in the South China Sea at very reasonable prices. We had our Ethno-Botno-Archaeologist, a young woman who wouldn’t provide her name for most of the journey as she felt that someone knowing her name would not grant her the respect she felt she deserved as a ranking member of our party. She became known as ExcuseMeMs for lack of anything else to call her. Later in the voyage when she became romantically involved with Big Lemon Kowalski and her entire personality changed, we learned that her name was Candace Flavours an exotic dancer from Detroit.

Then there were all the rest, bearers, packers, signalmen, E.M.T.’s spending their two-week vacation to help with any medical emergencies that might arise. Our meteorological crew to map out our weather, linguists for those times when communications might be a problem, fry cooks, sous chefs, farmers, hunter-gatherers, animal trainers, mechanics in case of trouble along the road, the list goes on and on. Sadly they’re all gone now, victims of the vagaries and circumstances that occurred along the way, scattered along the roadside like human litter. Many with No Deposit, No Return, stamped on their lives and little hope of redemption. But that’s the way it is in the big city. Too bad, too sad for them.

The two I miss the most though and the two that seemed least likely to connect are the ones I wonder most about. That is of course Candy Flavours and Big Lemon Kowalski. After the night they went missing in Livingston, Montana when they entered that strange building and never came out again I can still see that other-worldly look on Candy’s face, her eyes glowing bright red like two cigar ends on a stormy windy night as she literally dragged Big Lemon through the doorway. I had attributed that to lust but now I think differently. The look of apprehension on Big Lemons face, a man who was unafraid of anything natural on this earth is still burned into my memory. I’ve had a lot of time to think about that as I have driven these lonesome highways and I am beginning to believe Candy may not have been an exotic dancer from Detroit after all. She wouldn’t give us her name because she didn’t have one, not one you could pronounce with a human tongue anyway. The Institute is always wary of stating there has been interaction or interference from an extra-terrestrial source before we have undeniable proof, lest it damage our reputation amongst serious scientific types, but it is beginning to be pretty clear that agents from another Galaxy have been up to their usual tricks and Candy may have been involved in it up to her pretty little false eyelashes. I should have been more suspicious, who wears four sets of false eyelashes anyway.

But that is all blood under the bridge as they say and I’ll mark that down in my journal as something to think about tomorrow. Today is what’s on the menu now and I’ve got a job to do. Since the loss of my crew I have had the daunting task of piloting and maintaining the Bokeh Maru alone. It has been a grueling job but what it has shown me is, I can do this on my own. Sure its hard. Sure its difficult. Sure its dangerous. Sure its … well you get the idea. Next time I’m not taking a crew of 31 or even six. I’m going alone, like Stanley and separately Livingston, or those two guys who went to the North pole, without each other and froze their Fuon-buey-bueys off, just me against the road, against the danger, against the world. I can’t wait.

That’s it. Journey’s over. The Bokeh Maru has earned her place as a valuable member of the Institute’s fleet of vessels and will be our choice to carry us on to new and better things. Watch for further adventures as The Institute goes back on the road again sometime in the future.

The Maiden Voyage of the Bokeh Maru – Day 13

Today my goal was to reach the Bear River Migratory Bird Refuge in Utah. It was my third visit here and I was anxious to see if there had been any changes made while I was gone. You know that this is a federally funded, federally managed, tax dollar supported organization under the strict control of the Federal Government, who rigidly sets the standards by which it is run and although occasionally there are errors that severely impact the users, they are here to help you. Wait… that ‘s the IRS. I meant to say that this is a wonderful place run by the state of Utah and free to the public. It caters to birds of all types without thought of race, creed or color. BearRiver7828 Having said that I must point out that this is a managed refuge and there are regulations in place to make this a better place for both birds, and the people that watch them. In this case there has been and ongoing problem with undocumented birds using and abusing the system. Consequently the powers that be thought it would be prudent to build a fence to limit the number of users that can be in the park at any one time. One of the most abusive groups that need to be managed are the Canadian Barn Swallows, a raucous but law-abiding group shown here waiting for their permits to be issued before they can enter the refuge and abuse it. They will line up on this fence for miles squawking and ruffling their feathers demanding that the fence be taken down and they be granted full use privileges. so far their demands have not been met. BearRiver8096 To better inform the public about birds and bird related species, each week the refuge chooses one bird to feature. The bird of the week this week is the Black-Necked Stilt, a largish shore bird closely related to the Not-So-Black-necked Stilt or as it is colloquially known here, the Grey-necked Stilt. It eats small stuff that it finds in the water, roots and berries and lasagna. It’s call is a soothing “HeyyyyyyyyyyWhatttttttsForDinnnnnner” followed by a chkk-chhkkk-charump. This week the refuge is absolutely saturated with them. BearRiver8092 The typical Black-necked Stilt has many personalities. This one reminds me of that guy you see at the fairgrounds, you know that guy, the one just standing there with his hands In his pockets looking around. Probably waiting for his wife or maybe for the kids to get off the Tilt-A-Whirl. He’s there because the kids like it and his wife can shop the booths along the midway. He’d rather be home sitting in his chair with a beer watching Wild Kingdom or Birds in Flight or something on the box. He could be a moult inspector or have some kind of 8-5 job and this is how he spends the week-ends. Basically a good guy. BearRiver8167 This is another kind of bird. They’re Grebe’s, there’s about a dozen different kind. This is this kind. They swim around, eat stuff, get married, have kids, and winter in the warmer parts of wherever. One is the male and the other is the female. I know, they kind a look a like, the way old people who have lived together for 70-80 years do. BearRiver8087 This might be a Grebe Egg. Their numbers are diminishing because they’re too lazy to build nests and lay their eggs instead in the middle of the road where dump trucks drive back and forth and you can see what happens. In doing the forensic work on this egg we determined that the egg fits perfectly between the spaces of the lugs in the dump truck tire and as the truck drove over the egg it broke it, but didn’t crush it. It is entirely possible that the chick was stuck between the lugs and after a certain number of tire revolutions was thrown free, dizzy but intact. Whether the youngster was ever reunited with the adults is unknown. Apparently Grebes have short memories and may have even forgot they laid this egg. There is talk of limiting dump truck travel in Utah during the Grebe breeding season but so far there has been no action in the Utah legislature. BearRiver8226 Lest you get the impression that life is harsh in a forbidding setting I want to reassure you that t here is beauty here too. This is the White-faced Ibis shallows where you see the calm serenity that can be found here on alternate Thursdays. BearRiver8216 Of course in a place as large and diverse as this refuge is, you can always find diversity amongst the flocks. This is the melting pot of Birdland as it were, and anything is possible in a biological way. Apparently there was a large meet and greet and a Jamaican oil-drum steel band was playing there and this young but naïve coot spent some time with the parrot who played lead drum and later as will happen, she was blessed with several chicks who seemingly took after their father. There are no value judgments here, after all this is nature, and there is no right or wrong in nature. BearRiver8233 Remember we talked earlier of the quota system being imposed on certain species of birds, well this is why. This is a distinct sub-group of the Canadian Barn Swallow, the Mud-Pluckers as they’re known, and their abusive use of the resources here at Bear River Migratory Bird Refuge. They are the primary reason sanctions are being imposed on these birds. Here they are caught red-handed, plucking mud out of the shoreline and flying off with it. Thousands, if not a bunch of thousands, of these mud stealing little birds have been depleting the shore line of its life-sustaining mud and disappearing. No one knows why. Mud just disappears, one beak full at a time. It is thought that the ponds and rivers in the refuge have been lowered by as much as 16 feet by the constant, continuous excavation of the shoreline by these Mud-Pluckers. If this isn’t reversed we may see nothing but giant sinkholes with a little water a the bottom. What’ll happen then, eh? We may have to stop these birds at the border. I don’t even want to think of what that might do to the already shaky relationship we have with our mud less neighbors to the North. BearRiver8289 Even after showing the dark side of the refuge it is still a hauntingly beautiful place. If you have any interest in birds or nature or life in general you must visit. If you don’t, nevermind, it’s just a flat place with some ponds, a ditch or two, and a lot of mosquitos, in fact I heard there’s a good movie playing down at the multiplex you should check it out. But if you are one of those who revel in nature and all that she has to offer, then you’re in luck, because the Bear River Migratory Bird Refuge is just down the road in Utah. See you there next time. Tomorrow I point The Bokeh Maru homeward and back to civilization as we know it.

I must go down to the roads again, to the lonely sea and the sky,
And all I ask is the Bokeh Maru and a star to steer her by;
And the wheel’s kick and the wind’s song and the white sail’s shaking,
And a grey mist on the roads I face, and a grey dawn breaking,
See you tomorrow .

The Maiden Voyage of The Bokeh Maru – Days 11 & 12

Phototrip7793New headquarters of the Oregon chapter of The Institute

Day 11 Rest & Rehabilitation

Today was spent in cleaning out and burning the few personal effects left from our missing crew members.  Old ginseng wrappers and cans of open beverages with unreadable labels. Remains of old unidentifiable meals that looked organic in nature but frankly could have been anything. Even a few pitifully constructed weapons in the form of sharpened sticks and socks filled with gravel that had been hastily constructed for the ill-fated mutiny that was put down by my trusted but now missing head of security, Big Lemon Kowalski. Remembering the carnage brought about by that big toothed but lovable lug, brought a warm glow of remembrance.

I found a few poems written by our Candace Flavours, known to us as ExcuseMeMs for most of the trip, that she had written to Big Lemon. They were so warm and caring they nearly brought a tear to my eye. Thinking her cold and callous and well, just plain mean, I would never thought her capable of harboring such tender feelings. Here is a partial excerpt from one.

My dearest BLK I love you mostly for your big yellow tooth

And not because you won’t wear your shooths

and tho I love your tattooed feet

they are less fragrant, but you know that, my sweet

I want you always to be mine

Or I will kill you

Love, your candy buttons

There was more, running on page after page ad nauseam, but they are personal and I shan’t share any more of them with you even if you were to pay me money in the form of cash, check, or money order, as I have too much respect for her now that she is gone. They were tender and moving and in some cases extremely explicit in nature, with many of the acts so detailed and graphic that they could only have been Chinese because of all the perverted stuff that comes out of that godless mis-begotten country, but no matter how much you beg, cajole or send me large amounts of money in the form of cash check or money order, I won’t budge. I mean it, so don’t ask.

Now that I seem to be bonding with my new site manager and his lovely wife I am beginning to feel the loss of my last two crew members, less and less each moment . In fact our new Mrs. Assistant Site Manager made us an extraordinary home-cooked meal tonight in which I may have over-indulged somewhat, and being in the throes of calorie saturation found myself unable to remember what, old what’s her name looked like. Or that monkey-faced big toothed baboon she had been mooning over.

Perhaps I’ll think about that tomorrow.

Day 12 New Digs

Today was a new day and a fresh start. After convincing our newest major employee to give up that tissue sample and DNA material, I assured him that we would cover all his legal expenses if any thing were to come of our future business dealings. Fortunately he didn’t ask me to sign any documents attesting to that fact so we headed off to look for a suitable site to create our new headquarters. It wasn’t long before we noticed this incredible find. It was remote, had a single power-line coming in, and seemed mostly abandoned so we proceeded to acquire it under the Oregon law of Finders Keepers.

Giddy with our initial success we immediately began to make plans to get started with the remodeling needed to keep wild animals out until winter made it too difficult for them to brave the storms and attempt to gain entrance.

First on the agenda, besides breaking down the front door to gain entrance, was to begin making notes for the materials needed to secure the premises from, like, the afore-mentioned wild animals and possible old owners who may be testy due to their poor planning and could be lurking around to cause mischief in one way or another. So it was lots of fast scribbling and quick note taking as the ideas poured forth in a flood of enthusiasm. Luckily our new assistant site manager knew how to write, so much progress was made this morning. Soon trucks bearing loads of flattened cardboard boxes to replace missing window glass and magic markers to write warning messages on the cardboard saying “Don’t Even Think of Coming In Here” and “Stay out! We mean it” and other cryptic messages such as

“The State of Oregon allows the use of deadly force in the protection of private property if the new owners, hereafter called the squatters, deem it necessary to keep out previous owners, hereafter known as previous owners, who didn’t think it was a good idea to leave someone home to protect the property they have now lost.”

would be arriving if they could ford the creek and climb over the snow fence. Of course the drivers would have to be blindfolded to protect the location of our newest headquarters but that was a surmountable problem.

There were many other tasks to be taken care of such as finding out why there were so many bleached bones lying about the well, and what was that black crust around the edge, and why there was that persistent scratching sound coming from behind that locked door leading to the basement. We decided that it was nothing as the low guttural moaning that accompanied the scratching was receding, and it appeared that what ever it was seemed to be going to sleep for the night.  We decided to leave the new Assistant Mrs. Site Manager there overnight to guard the place as we needed to get back into town and round-up some of these supplies and to make sure we had a hot meal in preparation of the next days activities. We left her with a flashlight, the .22 with the few shells we had left, a power bar and the warning not to open the door to the basement.

I had few qualms about leaving them in the morning as I had to continue my journey homeward the next day. They seemed more than capable and I was sure if Mrs. Assistant Site Manage was ok in the morning all would go well and the newest site would be up and producing useful data soon.

The journey was soon coming to an end and I was already waxing nostalgic about it but there were at least two more days to get home yet so anything could happen. Tomorrow I would enter Utah and head South. Stay tuned.

The Maiden Voyage of the Bokeh Maru – Day 10

Day10_7474Somewhere outside of Livingston Montana

I awoke slowly this morning to the gentle rocking of The Bokeh Maru. The wind was picking up and the low rumble of faraway thunder rushed by leaving nothing but silence in its wake. I listened for the sound of Big Lemons gravelly voice gently coaxing the crew to their morning tasks. I wondered where the sound of ExcuseMe… I mean Candy’s, iron-toed Doc Martins were as she would move down the aisle kicking the late sleepers out of her way, when suddenly I remembered and realized all the comforting sounds of the morning routine were gone, along with her and Big Lemon. The Bokeh Maru was empty except for me.

Yesterday, as you remember, closed with the disappearance of Candace Flavours and Big Lemon Kowalski going into that strange building in Livingston Montana and disappearing without a trace. I jumped up, ran outside, thinking I would find them coming out of the building, sheepishly holding hands and ready for breakfast. But they didn’t of course, they were gone. Everything appeared to be back to normal, there were no flashing lights or strange humming sounds, the doors were all locked and the morning traffic went by on the road into town as if nothing strange had happened here. The only link to last night was that strange storm building to the North. There wasn’t a sign of my last two crewmen and friends. Well friends if I had liked them better. I ran frantically about calling their names but it was as I feared they were gone.

Since there was nothing to be done I began the procedures to get the
Bokeh Maru up and running. Taking one last look around to see if I had missed anything I pointed the Bokeh Maru West and headed towards our satellite facilities in Oregon, where I planned on spending a few days recuperating and conferring with my Department head. I was hoping there might even be the chance to pick up some new crew members if he had staff to spare.

Running the Bokeh Maru alone was a new experience. For one thing the missing weight of 31 crew members upped her speed from 38-39 mph to nearly 70. That was a welcome surprise. I never would have guessed that the wind resistance of those hanging on up on the roof would have made that significant a difference. The quietness was also a factor. Normally there would have been the sound of the many different languages spoken by the various crew members and the sounds of casual curses in everything from Urdu to the various Malaysian dialects ringing through the cabin. It was sad but at the same time I found myself enjoying the solitude. Mostly I missed Big Lemons shiny yellow tooth gleaming in the sunlight coming through the windshield as he quietly polished it with a bit of  emery paper. I even found myself looking about for ExcuseMeMs, but more for the fact that I didn’t like her standing behind me very much.

I began to enter the countryside where The Institute had set up it’s western observatory when the first shock hit me.

Day10_7805remains of our Oregon observatory

Our observatory was a shambles. I had been on an inspection trip just a year ago and it was up and running. Who broke all the glass? Where was my $149, on sale at Wal-Mart super-quality far-reaching telescope? Why was it a crumbling ruin? Where was the dome? That was really expensive. Why was the fence down? What happened here? I would have plenty of questions for my site manager you can bet on that.

I received another shock as I neared our Oregon headquarters. Our regional airstrip where The Institute’s planes were hangered had been reduced to a squalid flight school and sightseeing operation.

Day10_7783the remains of our once proud fleet of aircraft

I was stunned. How could a successful operation that was generating tens of hundreds of dollars fall into such rack and ruin in  less than a year. Heads were going to roll.

I pulled into our headquarters later that afternoon, wishing that I had Big Lemon with me to help educate the local management team when I discovered they were gone, all of them. In their place, living in the Institutes main headquarters, were people I had never seen before. Threatening to evict them immediately I asked them for an explanation. They told me they had bought the place from the guy who lived there before, my manager, the bastard, and showed me the bill of sale he had given them written on the back of a grocery bag with a felt tip pen. Upon conferring with a local attorney it turns out that sales completed with a felt tip pen regardless of what they were written on, were not only legal in Eastern Oregon but irreversible. It was just, “So Sad, Too Bad”, for me.

I did the only thing I could do to salvage what was left of the situation and that was hire the two of them to be my new Oregon representatives of The Institute. They turned out to be a wonderful couple, especially her, and he seemed trainable so I guess we’ll try and make the best of things. The upside is I will need to visit the headquarters here in the beautiful Wallowa valley to check on training and the rebuilding of the Observatory and our airstrip.

I did find out that my previous manager, the bastard, had succumbed to the temptations provided  by the high-rolling con artist that was producing videos for “Young Girls Gone Crazy” and needed our various off-site locations as backdrops for his videos. The story was the entire production was just a front for hard partying sorority girls and others of questionable repute.

The only way I had to deal with the property loss and damages was to bring in Batchu Sen, my Macau affiliate, as a partner. I gave him the photos, fingerprints, tissue samples and DNA that we take from each of our site managers and he will do the rest. He’s still upset over the loss of Big Lemon and is in no mood to be forgiving. If we didn’t have an understanding backed with various documents in our safety deposit boxes I would be concerned for our own well-being.

I’ll be offline for a day or two as I begin the process of indoctrination I provide all new employees of The Institute. It takes a while to build the bond necessary to have the excellent relationships The Institute has with all of its employees and we work hard  at it.

Then I’ll be piloting The Bokeh Maru through Utah and ultimately home to the World Headquarters of The Institute in Colorado.

The Maiden Voyage of The Bokeh Maru – Day 8 & 9

Day9_7487building where it happened Livingston Montana

Day 8 Travel Day

Not much happened this day and we were on the road again. Just the four of us, a skeleton crew if you will, all that was left of the brave band of travelers that set out, it seems like weeks ago. Now we are down to Big Lemon, Candy, the former ExcuseMeMs, our timekeeper and me.

Through various mishaps along the way we have managed to lose 28 crew members to various and sundry misfortunes. Read back through the journal if you haven’t kept up and their departures, disappearances and desertions are fully chronicled. Some of those crewmen were sadly missed and some we were glad got eaten by that bear.

We are headed for Livingston Montana and hope to be there soon. Ours supplies are low, we’re on the edge of exhaustion and tempers are a little frayed. We have had to stop several times so people could go outside and scream at the top of their lungs. Candy seemed to need this the most and when I was driving if I saw her coming down the aisle with that look in her eyes I would immediately pull over and open the emergency exit.

I have to end this as Big Lemon has signaled he does not want to drive anymore. So I am closing out this day’s entry and will try to catch up more tomorrow.

Day 9 Terror in Livingston Montana

Holy Moly, holy moly, holy moly. What a day it has been. What a day the last two days have been. To say that strange and unbelievable things have been happening would be an understatement. I don’t why these things keep happening. We must be traveling under a black moon.

After I relieved Big Lemon at the wheel yesterday he went to the back to talk to Candy, who was looking like I might have to pull over again, when there was this terrific commotion with things crashing, people yelling, thudding, inhuman sounds and a steady thumping noise that I soon realized was the sound a fist makes as it is being pounded on the top of somebody’s head.

I haven’t spoken much about our timekeeper as there wasn’t a whole lot to say about him. He kept to himself, seemed to do his job and stayed mainly in the background. His name was Woodrow Boucher, every one called him Wood, and he was a master wood-carver from Minnesota. As this was going to be a long trip we felt we needed someone to keep track of the days we traveled. If you have ever taken a long road trip you know how the days can run together and soon you don’t know if you’ve walked to work or wound your watch as my dad used to say. So we thought it prudent to bring along a timekeeper to keep a physical calendar of our journey.  His job, and it was the only thing he had to do, was to carve a notch in this stick we had provided him to keep a daily record of how long we had been on the road. One notch for each day. What his background check didn’t reveal was that he was extremely nervous around any type of sharp instrument and had in fact been asked to resign from the Minneapolis Wood-carvers Club. Consequently when it was time for him to carve his daily notch in the stick he would be overcome by an incredible anxiety attack. According to the look of the stick and the pitiful notches carved in it, it looked like we had been on the road 311 days instead of the eight or nine actually spent. The tension of the last few days apparently were too much for him and faced with having to cut one more notch in the stick he went into a gran mal seizure.

That in itself wouldn’t have been a huge problem, we carry leather restraints, but in his flailing he managed to cut off one of Candy’s braids, a source of great pride for her, and as I learned later, one of the sources of Big Lemon’s attraction to her. Big Lemon became so enraged that he…. well, the rest of this story is a little grim. Luckily there was one of those roadside clinics in the back of a semi trailer they set up to give truckers, physicals for their drivers licenses or something, and they took Wood in. I prudently drove off while they were phoning for Flight For Life out of Livingston, not wanting to give them anymore details than I had to. Big Lemon was comforting Candy in the back as we drove away.

The rest of the trip to Livingston was uneventful and quiet with Candy picking up the pieces of paneling that had been torn loose and Big Lemon using his skills in repairing nets and stitching shrouds closed to stitch up the mattress.

Just when I thought things couldn’t get any weirder, they didn’t double, they squared, like in weird².  While looking for a place off the beaten path to spend the night in case anyone wanted to ask us more questions about the day’s incident, we came across this building on the outskirts of town. Seemingly abandoned it looked like a place where we could park the Bokeh Maru, to rest, regroup and go over her for repairs if necessary. I was a little put off by its strange architecture but since this was a voyage of discovery we decided to stay and check it out.

The altercation between Wood Boucher and Big Lemon had unnerved Candy but also made her connection to Big Lemon intensify to the point where even I saw that this could only end one way. Later that evening the two of them wanting more privacy than could be found on the Bokeh Maru, left hand in hand to explore the building. The door was unlocked although when I tried it later it wasn’t anymore, and the last I ever saw of them was Candy pulling Big Lemon through the doorway.

I had turned in and was having a fitful dream about alien presences and the unspeakable things they were said to do to the folks they encountered, when later in the evening just before it was fully dark I heard a strange humming sound. It increased until it was nearly deafening. I ran out in time to see all the lights in the building flashing and then the red lights on the tower came on one by one, brilliantly lighting up the darkening sky, and then there was nothing. No lights, no sound, no Candy and Big Lemon, just me and the Bokeh Maru. Everything happened so fast that the only picture I could get was this one right after all the lights went out.

I searched frantically, calling their names, looking for any trace of them but they were gone. They are still gone as I write this. I fear for their safety. I will wait until morning and if they haven’t been returned by then I must consider them lost forever and continue on alone.