Monday, October 15, 2012
Here I Am Again
Here I am again.
Here’s a quick rundown of some stuff we did on vacation:
1 – Saw Bob Newhart in concert.
2 – Got licked by a goat.
3 – Came face-to-face with close to a ton-and-a-half of
angry pot roast.
4 – Transported a bug across state lines.
5 – Had oysters on the half shell for breakfast.
6 – Hit the lottery three times.
7 – Got lost in Amesbury.
8 – Had a stranger rub my naked body with oil.
9 – Took a subway to an island.
10 –
Ah, hell, I can’t think of a tenth thing right now, but the
first nine are enough to whet your appetite, right? If not, you’re pretty damn
jaded.
There will be some photos, but I can’t vouch for their
quality. I’m a rotten photographer. Those that I steal from elsewhere will
probably be decent.
MY WIFE may remember one or two things in a slightly
different fashion than I do. In other words, she will remember them
incorrectly. I will, however, offer her a chance to read the things I’ve
written and I may insert her re-imaginings as I’m in the mood.
I will tell you about some of the things listed – those that
I think I can squeeze a stand-alone 1500 words out of without need to prop them
up with some other event - in the coming days. Right now, I’ll give you the
general outline of where we went and what we did while we were there.
A week ago last Thursday, we started our vacation by driving
to Portsmouth, New Hampshire. It’s a lovely little seaside
community not too far over the northern border from Massachusetts. New Hampshire has the smallest amount of
coastline of any of the states that HAS a coastline – eleven miles, as I
recall. If it’s a bit more, my apologies to the tourism folks up there. In any
case, you see the “Welcome To New Hampshire” sign, the person you’re driving
with says, “Oh, look, there’s the ocean!”, and then you’re in Maine.
(If Maine
and Massachusetts
worked together, to purchase New
Hampshire’s section of Route One, they could cut out
the middleman. This would save some pot smokers from a whole bunch of confusion
since the evil weed is decriminalized in those two states but not in the state
whose motto is “Live Free Or Die”. As MY WIFE points out, Maine is the only one of the three that
seems to have thought the whole thing through since they decriminalized dope
and then slapped an extra tax onto snack foods. However, I digress, mightily,
and I’m disgustingly stone-cold sober at the moment, oddly enough.)
We really like Portsmouth.
It’s small enough to be totally accessible in every way, nothing is more than a
mile from anything else, it has the sort of liberal atmosphere that even a
crusty semi-conservative-libertarian such as myself can enjoy (tattoos cover
more skin in Portsmouth than just about any other place in America, I think,
and nobody would look askance at you if you strolled downtown wearing a
mini-skirt, a shaven head, rattlesnake boots, and “I Like Ike” shaven into your
chest hair while walking your pet ferret), yet is large enough and politically
incorrect enough to attract old-timers such as Bob Newhart to perform there.
Bob is still a hoot at age 83. Except for one piece in his
act where he pretends to be a driving instructor, he comes on stage and
performs actual stand-up for about 90 minutes; that is to say, he’s on his feet
for the entire show, which at his age is enough in itself to garner respect. He
tells stories and jokes, of course, and then intersperses a few film clips from
earlier in his career (along with live narration), and throws in a few bits of
good-natured racism and sexism just to keep everyone on their toes, lest you
start to slip into a mindset where you begin to think of him as some sort of
harmless grandpa on stage. He still has some edge to his work, I’m happy to
report. His only real concession to age is that he does very short tours. His
entire itinerary for this jaunt consisted of Portsmouth, Boston, and then on to
Vermont, where he is no doubt lionized beyond belief due to his one-time TV
role as a somewhat incredulous and befuddled Vermont innkeeper. Seeing a living
legend was a very enjoyable start to our vacation.
So, that takes care of number one on the list. I think I’ll
tell you about number five next, then leave the other seven things to your
imagination until tomorrow, the next day, and maybe the day after (although,
knowing the sorts of things you’re capable of imagining, by the time I get
around to really telling you about them, you will no doubt have made them into
something entirely salacious and rude. If YOU told ME that you were licked by a
goat, I’d do the same, so I can’t say that I blame you.)
The raw oysters for breakfast were part of a magnificent
Sunday Brunch served at the amazingly swanky Wentworth-By-The-Sea.
As discussed earlier, New
Hampshire has only so much seacoast. This huge joint
takes up about half of it. Believe me, the photo doesn’t do the subject justice. It’s a very large old-fashioned resort hotel,
festooned with tennis courts and gardens, with a golf course on the grounds and
maybe a polo field out back, too, although I’m just making that up (I think.)
There IS an outdoor wedding chapel, a slew of yachts are docked nearby, and no
matter which road you use to approach the hotel you have to cross two bridges
so it’s possibly on an island but it may just be an isthmus or perhaps a
peninsula depending upon how much you’ve had to drink and which one you’re able
to pronounce right at the moment.
The Sunday Brunch is the sort you would expect to find at
such a grand old place, full of a wide selection of well-prepared comestibles
served by obsequious wait staff. Even if you come into it with some sort of shitty
attitude, you’ll be plied with however many mimosas it takes to get you in the
right mood. They come with the meal, unlimited. That in itself is enough to
sell the thing to most folks, but the buffet of oysters, prime rib, roast pork
loin, various exotic vegetables in skillets, swordfish and salmon, the usual
classic breakfast items such as bacon, sausage, stuffed French toast,
freshly-prepared omelettes, and for all practical purposes an endless array of
pastries, breads, tarts, pies, fresh fruit, muffins, bagels, and, uh… I don’t
know what I was getting at when I began that sentence, but here we are and I’m
hungry again. For what you receive, the cost is a ridiculously low $45 per
person. Hell, anyone who hasn’t taken an AA pledge can easily make that up in the
mimosas alone. The rest is gravy, except for the things I described above which
aren’t.
Tomorrow I think I’ll tell you about the goat. Or maybe
Bubba, the angry pot roast. Or maybe both. In any case, drink up and I’ll be
back.
Soon, with more better stuff.
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25 comments:
Missed you. Glad you're back safe. We'll wait awhile to see if you're back sound.
Glad you had a great vacation with some extraordinary adventures. I'm a big Bob Newhart fan and I envy you for being able to see him in person. Take care and have a terrific week.
Did you fly in on the Grace L. Ferguson Airline and Storm Door Company? Newhart is amazing. . .
Welcome back, Sully! I have missed you. A whole round of baseball playoffs transpired while you were gone, and I'm happy to say that my Tigers are still very much alive and kicking (the shit out of the Yankees at the moment, so a Red Sox fan can appreciate that, maybe; of course, we're still two wins away from winning anything of consequence, but the way our starters have been pitching, we're feeling pretty good, just at the moment). . .
I looked at a map of NH, and 11 miles of coastline looks to be about right. Maybe 12 or 13. . . Jen has a brother who lives somewhere in the southeast corner of New Hampshire ('course, near as I can tell, 97% of the population of the state lives in the southeast corner). . .
Love hearing about New England,beautiful place, sorry to say I've never been.
So relieved to hear Bob Newhart's still with us! I thought he wasn't....He looks great for 83!!
Welcome back.
Ah, good to see your writing again, MLGF! I'll keep all my thoughts about goat licking to myself and will wriggle in my seat waiting for the next tale about your vacation.
Hmm... Portsmouth Ink? A new reality tattoo show to rival Miami Ink or Ink Masters? I could imagine it.
Sounds like an amazing vacation, especially that resort. WOW!
S
Oh my! Oysters on the half-shell -I'll take two dozen of 'em with lots of good hot horseradish sauce please? Haven't had those things in well over 40 years now and just reading about them makes me long for the good old days!
Craig - Yeah, the southeast corner is filled with people who got sick of Massachusetts, moved over the border, and are now trying as hard as they can to replicate the shittiest of Massachusetts' politics in New Hampshire, near as I can tell. The folks further north are not overly fond of them :-)
Yeah, the Tiggers are looking good. I'm rooting for them, as you might have imagined.
Heh, heh. Know Portsmouth and Wentworth-by-the-Sea well. Once went to an absolute blowout retirement party there, pre-children; we spent the night and availed ourselves of the brunch Sun, which was exactly as you described.
Did #5 have anything to do with #8? Glad you had a great vacation. Beautiful New England - grew up there, but need to go back and see it as an adult.
Glad to see you back in such fine spirits.
"...Maine is the only one of the three that seems to have thought the whole thing through..."
YOUR WIFE could probably work as a legislative analyst.
There's an AA Pledge?
you had be at bob newhart. i would love to see him perform! i had no idea he was 83. wow.
mimosas? yes! oysters? no thanks. but yeah, i could suck down $45 worth of mimosa. ;)
Glad you had a good time, and i've had close encounters with goats before -- at kids' petting zoos. That's what i think of when i think of goats.
Licked By A Goat WBADNF... ah fuggedabbotit.
@ Craig - Six more games... hardly anyone remembers anyone but the World Series winner
MMMmmm... oysters. It's been a couple o' few years since I indulged, or rather, had the opportunity to indulge. I LOVE the damned things but ya don't see many here in the desert. I'd have eaten 45 bucks worth of oysters alone...
(sigh)
Looks like ya had a GREAT vacation... Welcome back!
There are still two weeks left in Goatober!!!
http://heritagefoodsusa.com/ventures/goat.html
The goat I would like..... the bull I would not!
Bob Newhart was very funny when I last saw him on TV. At his age, he is doing better than I could do!
You are lucky to have travelled.
Maggie X
Nuts in May
@IT - Point taken, but we still get to hoist a flag. . . ;)
Sounds like the kinda vacation I'd LOVE, especially if I'm not the one doing the driving. ;)
Mimosas ROCK.
Hey Jim, Good to see you had a great vacation, the beginning sounds like a great time, I can just imagine Newhart was really funny.
the goat lick has me a bit worried, but the oysters for breakfast would be one I'd be up for.
So glad to see you back....missed you.
When I read about mimosas, I was puzzled. Mimosas are trees here with beautiful pink spidery-looking flowers. Couldn't figure out how they served them for breakfast. Googled it. OK. Now, I understand. Duh, me!
Bob Newhart...so glad you got to see him in person. Loved his show with Suzanne Pleshette playing his wife....brings back a lot of memories to hear about him. I didn't know he was that old, either. Time gets away from me.
Your vacation sounds like it was a fun-packed one. I look forward to each blog about it. Tell your WIFE hello from me. Welcome back to both of you!!
Hugs,
Jackie
I am so hungry right now, and wishing I lived in New Hampshire. What a fabulous place! Sounds like y'all had a great vacation. I would love to see Bob Newhart in person!
The blogosphere just isn't the same when you are not around! Welcome back. Here in the UK a mimosa equals a 'buck's fizz' -- I prefer 'mimosa' myself -- and as many as you can drink -- oh yes! Your vacation sounds super and I'm really looking forward to hearing about the pot roast...
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