Sunday, December 15, 2019

Ecstatic on Watatic

This one's been sitting in the queue for a bit, mostly because of computer issues loading pics through the blogging software.  But all is well now, and I wanted to share a family trip up Mount Watatic in Ashby/Ashburnham this fall, mostly as a way to brag about my awesome family, but also to show off a hidden treasure in our neck of the woods for the interested hikers.
The gateway to the main trail is a monolithic, multi-ton split rock, which, quite frankly, has that Lord of the Rings Battle at Amon Hen feel to it.  Sadly, no Uruk-Hai in sight this day, just my Fellowship.
Mount Watatic boasts an elevation of 1,832 feet, and is part of a group of summits known as the Wapack Range, which starts in Worcester County, and extends into southern New Hampshire.
Other sister mounts in this range include Mount Wachusett, which we E Streeters have run up numerous times, and Pack Monadnock, which Barry, Scott and I sorta ran up once and declared we would never do so again.  And thus far, we've held true to that pledge. (It was hellacious.)
Everything was going great on this family hike, lots of laughs, great exercise, tremendous bonding time.  And then came the behemoth in the next picture - the Midgard Serpent, the Anaconda of Ashby, Nagini from House Slytherin, Snake Plissken himself.
Not sure I've ever seen Heather and Jack move so quickly up a hill.
Here, Andrew and Katie stand watch to make sure the python doesn't make its way uphill in pursuit of the ladies.
Finally, we reached the summit
For decades, the 280+ acre mountain was used as a ski area, but that recreation ended somewhere around 1989.
Now it's just a terrific one day hike.  Moderately challenging, but very family friendly - dog friendly too!  Wasn't able to determine the meaning of the name Watatic, but I'm assuming it's of Native American origins.  Anyone?
As always, I needed to seek out the reference marker.
Walk softly, and carry a big stick.
My world
Front and back and front again, courtesy of Katie Durkin, Audubon photographer
The young lovers, ready to scale whatever mountains they encounter, together
And this last pic on our way down, I had to take/share, just because I was feeling knotty.
That's a wrap on Watatic!  Highly recommended for a single-day climb.  Just make sure to stop up top and take in the views and appreciate this wonder in our extended backyard.


Saturday, December 14, 2019

Like A Rolling Stone

We could have named this blog post after any one of hundreds of Bob Dylan's greatest songs - Ballad of a Thin Man, I Shall Be Released, My Back Pages, and on and on and on.
But for a myriad of reasons,we figure Dylan's most iconic anthem - pegged by many rock aficionados as the greatest song of all time - is the one that would aptly help pay tribute to my brother, Jim Cook, who packed away his planning books and called it a day, retiring from the Lowell Plan after working in city planning for more than 40 years.  Besides the Dylan nod, the title also pays homage to one of his other favorite bands, that featuring Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, and company.
But Things Have Changed, and Jimmy walked out the doors of the Lowell Plan on Friday afternoon, leaving it in the more than capable hands of incoming director Allison Lamey, along with Germaine Vigeant and Melissa Suprenant and the numerous board members of the Lowell Plan and the Lowell Development and Financial Corporation.
He was all thumbs up as he got ready to step away from his desk for the last time.  (He left rotating pics of his grandchildren as a screen saver on his computer.)
Prior to picking up the reins at the Lowell Plan, Jimmy worked for more than a decade for the city of Lowell, serving as Assistant City Manager under former managers Joe Tully and Jim Campbell.
Through a Simple Twist of Fate, he joined the Lowell Plan in 1990 and has been involved in some manner, in dozens of city projects since, including the construction of the Tsongas Arena, Lelacheur Park, and many more All Along the Watchtower.
Having known Jimmy since pretty much the day I was born - he's SIGNIFICANTLY older than me - I grew up with the non-Lowell Plan version.
For me, I recall the brother who would have his mega-sized headphones on, air guitar playing on his tennis racket, and singing into the glow-in-the-dark traffic light at the end of the pull fob that turned his overhead light on.
The problem with that story, though, was that while Jimmy was singing along to the Dylan or Bruce Springsteen song he could hear at deafening levels in his earphones, the only thing the rest of us could hear was Jimmy's voice -sans music or tone.
Trust me on this.  Jimmy's singing would make Bob Dylan sound like Michael Buble.  It was piercing.
My mother used to stand in the bedroom below Jimmy's, trying to get him to come downstairs for dinner.  She would take the pole end of a broomstick and bang it against the ceiling to capture his attention.  Her ceiling was pockmarked with dozens of indentations from the other-business end of the broomstick, battle scars of Jimmy's frustrated music career.
Eventually, my father would install an electronic buzzer that was used to great glee by all who needed to summon Jimmy away from his music.  It was droning and effective and could be heard past the ear-bleeding levels of Bruce's latest release.
Growing up, Jimmy was notorious for skipping our Sunday meals - not because of the company, but because of the food.  He usually shied away from the turkey or roast beef dinners with all the fixings, choosing instead a steak bomb from Johnny's on Chelmsford Street, a veal cutlet from Santoro's on Gorham Street, or his standby favorite, hot dogs from Elliott's.
And yes the urban legend is true.  He had Elliott's hot dogs delivered as his meal to his 1988 wedding to Candy. 
It was Jimmy who took me to my first concert - David Bowie.  And my second - Queen.  And my third - the Who (the less said about that security breach, the better).  And fifth and sixth - Bruce Springsteen.  And probably dozens more after that.
My parents are both deceased, so I think it's safe now for me to say Jimmy helped sneak me into my first nightclubs while underage.  Not for the drinking, mind you, but for the music.
Music has provided the soundtrack behind the scenes for pretty much Jimmy's entire life.
I expect his time spent listening to concert downloads and outtakes will dramatically increase now that he's going to have more time on his hands.
You must leave now, take what you need, you think will last
But whatever you wish to keep, you better grab it fast
Yonder stands your orphan with his gun
Crying like a fire in the sun
Look out the saints are comin’ through
And it’s all over now, Baby Blue
It's Not Dark Yet, but he's heading home, and looking forward to being able to spend time with his family, especially his six grandchildren.
Wish him well, won't you?


Then take me disappearin’ through the smoke rings of my mind
Down the foggy ruins of time, far past the frozen leaves
The haunted, frightened trees, out to the windy beach
Far from the twisted reach of crazy sorrow
Yes, to dance beneath the diamond sky with one hand waving free
Silhouetted by the sea, circled by the circus sands
With all memory and fate driven deep beneath the waves
Let me forget about today until tomorrow