Some like it long.

A lot more comments than usual on yesterday’s post. As always, I appreciate your feedback. Many of the shared thoughts expressed some concern about my alcohol consumption and its potential for negatively impacting my life. I see myself as maintaining control for the most part, and I don’t consider my drinking to be a problem. I know, I know, spoken like a true alcoholic in the throes of denial. But this is the life I’ve chosen, and I will continue to imbibe at or near my current level within the parameters (usually between 5 and 8 p.m.) I’ve established for myself. It’s what I do and what I enjoy, and I hope to live long and die hard.

So, this post is supposed to be about yesterday’s Hash; now, let’s get back to that. Yesterday’s trail was the first Hared by Kermit the Frog, at least for Subic Bay H3. I heard a rumor that he laid a trail so difficult in Angeles City that they banned him from Hareing there in the future. I’m not going to say that our trail yesterday was as bad as all that, but it was long (over 10K) with three significant climbs, including Easter Mountain. I was shocked to see how long our strongest and fastest Hashers took to finish; a couple of them didn’t make it back until the Circle was over. I heard quite a bit of bitching and moaning about both the difficulty and poor marking of the trail. I will give Hare Kermit credit for providing three trail options: a long one with Easter Mountain, a long one without Easter Mountain, and a short version with only the first climb. Of course, as a dedicated shortcutter, I managed to avoid all three hill climbs and had a mostly enjoyable 8.5-kilometer flat walk. That’s just the way I roll!
















Some after-Hash revelry at It Doesn’t Matter where I purchased a lady drink for the IDM girls who participated in the Fralics beauty pageant on Sunday. Then I drug my tired ass home with the help of a tricycle.

My interesting (to me) journey through the LTG archives continues. What’s been different about the early days of the blog was my inconsistency in posting. These days, I take pride in providing a daily update on my so-called life. In July 2006, “Stuff about things” was my first post in over thirty days. I had a lot of catching up to do, so it was appropriately long and boring.
Fifteen years ago, I came across a clip from the movie “Junior Bonner,” which triggered some memories from my life in Prescott, Arizona, in the early 1980s. So, I shared those thoughts on Facebook, and Facebook reminded me about them today. Thanks for helping an old guy out!
I wound up taking a trip today. Right down memory lane. I saw something on the internet that led me somewhere else and then took me to a link for Steve McQueen. I clicked that and was reminded of the movie Junior Bonner. It was filmed in Prescott, Arizona. I used to live in Prescott. The song that played during the opening credits was “Arizona Morning” by Rod Hart, a musician from Prescott. Hart and his band used to play at the Wagon Wheel, a club I’d frequent when the urge to country dance hit me. And then I recalled a woman I used to dance with and how I met her. I was taking classes at Yavapai Community College, and she was my instructor. One day after class, she asked if anyone was interested in taking “country swing” dance lessons with her, and I volunteered. She was probably ten years older than me (I was 25). We got along great, and before long, we were doing horizontal dancing as well. Until one day she asked me to father a child for her “no strings attached”. That freaked me out big time, and I ran for the hills, leaving her and her biological clock in my dust. I hadn’t thought of her for some 30-odd years. Until today, when I heard this song:
Morning, Arizona morning
Almost sets me free
Makes me glad to be alive
Wondering, why I started wandering
Should have stayed right here
Underneath the clear blue skies
Sadness, changing now to gladness
With the rustle of the breeze through the pinyon trees
Where I lay
In the morning, Arizona morning
A place where I can smile
And see a hundred miles away
The birds are flying high above the morning
Singing to the colors of the dawn
And in my mind I hear a gentle warning
You've been a wrangler and a rambler
Much too long
And a rover. Wishing it was over
All my battles won, resting in the sun this way
In the morning, Arizona morning
Coming home today, wishing I could stay
Wishing I could stay.
What a life I’ve lived! I hope there are some more chapters to come.
Today’s YouTube video discloses that twenty US F-16 fighters have deployed to the Philippines, and China isn’t happy about it. Well, I’m no military expert, but I don’t think twenty of our older jets will be much of a deterrent, but it’s better than nothing. I read somewhere of an intelligence report saying China will invade Taiwan within the next six months. Damn, looks like we are headed for interesting times.
Laugh while you can!



And there you have it: another day, another post. I won’t apologize, and you don’t need to thank me. I will try to keep ’em coming!
Who gives a shit about your boozing, mate? Tell those disagreeable nannies to piss off and sit on a potato – Your alcoholism is the most likeable thing about you!
Let’s be real here…..you are in the autumn years of your life. Getting through the remaining days with a booze soaked smile on your face and dying a year or two earlier is far preferable to maximizing your stay and boring us with daily blogs of “221 days since my last drink” and supposedly inspirational quotes farted out from some bellend at AA.
Do you have a drinking problem? Absolutely – You are relegated to drinking that PH swill instead of some far preferable Belgian or Czech beer.
If drunkenness causes you to turn yellow, or start beating ur missus, maybe it’s time to slow down a bit, but in the meantime…..bottoms up, dear!!
The F-16 video makes numerous false statements, such as that the US Air Force has deployed the jets and they have landed in the Philippines.
In reality, this is merely the approval of a potential sale of F-16s and related armament to the Philippine government at a later undetermined date. This is NOT a US deployment.
It’s still a pretty big deal, given the regional tensions, but the distinctions are quite significant.
A reminder to take internet shit from dubious sources with a big grain of salt.
Cheers.
DS, yeah, I wondered about that, especially because I hadn’t heard about this anywhere else. Selling F-16s we don’t need anymore makes more sense. That said, I am hearing more jet engines overhead than I used to. Usually they are those big military transport aircraft. I fear something is brewing…
Dr. Greg, thank you for your support. I drink out of a 12 ounce bottle, so I’m not a heavy drinker.
More military activity these days because annual Balikatan exercises involving 10,000 US troops begin later this month. Nothing more.
Drain, Better to be prepared than surprised for sure.