May 01 2013

TWO EMMY NOMINATIONS!!!

Hit and Run History and Through My Eyes each receive an Emmy nomination!

On the evening of April 30, 2013, the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences – New England Chapter announced nominations for the 2013 Emmy Awards. In the category for Interstitial Video, two of the seven nominees were joint productions of the Cape Cod Community Media Center and WGBH-Boston.

“Skipping School”, an episode from elementary education travel series, Through My Eyes, was filmed in Hong Kong. The hosts, Ava and Sofie, ages 7 and 8, explored the bakeries of the city, and then are invited to join in with rope skipping teens at a local high school.

Credits: Jennifer Sexton- Creator, Writer & Director, Sofie E. Buckley & Ava Hischak – hosts, Jay Sheehan – Audio Engineer, Andrew Giles Buckley, Producer.

“7,377 Miles from Home” is the first in Hit and Run History‘s Falklands series. On the trail of the Columbia Expedition — the first American voyage ’round the world — the Gumshoe Historians of Hit and Run History head down to the disputed islands deep in the South Atlantic. In this episode, the crew demonstrates how very remote the Falklands are, with footage from two days of travel punctuated with an ongoing interview with Samantha Addison of the Falklands Islands Radio Service.

Credits: Andrew Giles Buckley – Creator, Producer & Director, Jay Sheehan – Production Manager & Audio Engineer, T. Kane Stanton & Kyanna Sutton – Videography & Stills.

Aside from the other five nominees in the Interstitial category, this pits Cape Cod’s two globetrotting travel girls of Through My Eyes against the scrappy band of Cape Cod filmmakers, Hit and Run History. Who will win out?

The full list of nominations for 2013 is available at the New England Emmy site.

New England Emmys: Twitter

New England Emmys: Facebook

No responses yet

Feb 24 2013

The Dengue & the Volcano

Gripped with Dengue Fever, Cape Verde gets help from the Gumshoe Historians

We thought our story lay only on Maio and Santiago. But Fogo — a cone rising from the ocean — is in the grips of dengue, its hospital overwhelmed and HRH brings in simple medical supplies.

Yet again we find connections back to Columbia and John Kendrick in a village at the base of the volcano. Coastal places and peoples stand connected, an ocean apart. And the wine flowed…

Interviews: Dr. Mario Sena, Hon. João Aqueleu Barbosa Amado

Locations: Hospital of São Filipe,Chã das Caldeiras and SantaCatarina

This program is funded in part by Mass Humanities, which receives support from the Massachusetts Cultural Council and is an affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities.

© Thunderball Entertainment Group 2013. Hit and Run History™ and the Columbia Expedition™ are trademarks of Thunderball Entertainment Group.

Watch this episode, “Fogo”, by subscribing to their FREE video podcast on iTunes. Just search “Hit and Run History”. Or watch online at YouTubeVimeo or Blip. Follow Hit and Run History as they follow the story of the Columbia Expedition and John Kendrick around the world at www.hitandrunhistory.com.

No responses yet

Feb 11 2013

The Isle of May welcomes the Gumshoe Historians

Cast off!

Cape Cod’s Gumshoe Historians are off at last, crossing the Atlantic. Next stop, the African archipelago of Cape Verde. The Columbia Expedition stopped here in November 1787, anchoring at the tiny island of Isle of May (Maio) at Porto Ingles.

The village on “English Roads” is a former slave entrepôt still bears the marks of human trafficking from centuries ago. So why did Captain Kendrick choose this barren little island to bring Columbia and Washington to? And why stay here for a week when the capital of the islands, Praia, lay just across the channel?

Hit and Run History finds some answers. And a ton of sunshine, sandy beaches and a friendly faces.

Locations: Logan Airport, Boston; Praia and Port Ingles, Maio, Cape Verde.

Interviews: Joshua M. Smith, AlanMcClennen, Jr.

This program is funded in part by Mass Humanities, which receives support from the Massachusetts Cultural Council and is an affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities.

© Thunderball Entertainment Group 2013. Hit and Run History™ and the Columbia Expedition™ are trademarks of Thunderball Entertainment Group.

Watch this episode, Maio, by subscribing to their FREE video podcast on iTunes. Just search “Hit and Run History”. Or watch online at YouTubeVimeo our Blip. Follow Hit and Run History as they follow the story of the Columbia Expedition and John Kendrick around the world at www.hitandrunhistory.com.

No responses yet

Feb 02 2013

Man Overboard

Cape Cod’s Intrepid Gumshoe Historians laugh in the face of death


Captain Kendrick’s sword is DONE. So Andrew Buckley and his Gumshoe Historians better test it out.

But as they prepare to follow the Columbia Expedition across the ocean, plans begin to unravel. Could they have gotten the wrong man in New York? Then they lose their Portuguese translator.

And news of an epidemic in Cape Verde.

This is turning out to be much more than a history show. This is an adventure.

Locations: Chatham, Sturgis Library – Barnstable, Quincy, Cape Cod Community Media Center

This program is funded in part by Mass Humanities, which receives support from the Massachusetts Cultural Council and is an affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities.

© Thunderball Entertainment Group 2013. Hit and Run History™ and the Columbia Expedition™ are trademarks of Thunderball Entertainment Group.

Watch this episode, Man Overboard, by subscribing to their FREE video podcast on iTunes. Just search “Hit and Run History”. Or watch online at on YouTubeVimeo our Blip.

Follow Hit and Run History as they follow the story of the Columbia Expedition and John Kendrick around the world at www.hitandrunhistory.com.

No responses yet

Oct 19 2012

Breakfast At Captain Kendrick’s Table

Looking across Hull Gut. A good jumping off point to catch a wind or the outgoing tide from Boston Harbor. Follow us on the trail of John Kendrick and the Columbia Expedition at www.blip.tv/hitandrunhistoryCommemorating Columbia and Washington Day

“Cold this morning. Brings ‘em inside.”

Looking at the breakfast cook across the counter, a man in a gray hoodie ordered coffee and replied, “Takes time for that boat to warm up, first run of the day.”

It was 8:35 a.m. and it looked like all regulars were piling in. A brilliant beginning to the day looking across Hull Gut to Peddocks Island. What better place to commemorate Columbia and Washington Day than Pemberton Bait & Tackle?

“Regular coffee. Milk and extra sugar?” the woman with the pot asked.

“Extra milk,” said the elderly gentleman who was unwrapping something in a paper towel. It was two slices of what looked to be homemade raisin bread. He passed it across the counter for her to toast with his order. “The bacon – do me a favor? Crispy. Crispy. Crispy.”

Two hundred and twenty-five years ago, something amazing happened here. Within a good stone’s throw from here, the very tip of the town of Hull, where Pemberton Point hooks out into Boston Harbor. This is where America took off.

“Fisherman’s, over easy. With bacon, home fries and an English.” Another regular.

Fishermen's Special at Pemberton Bait & Tackle in Hull

I was having the Fisherman’s Special. Three eggs sunnyside up, three strips of bacon, hash browns, and toast. Coffee. Orange juice. Competing commercials from Elizabeth Warren and Scott Brown were punctuating the Fox News broadcast over my head.

“No bagels,” the cook said to someone over my shoulder. This was a commuter, stopping in before the ferry arrived. The strong northwest wind drove him indoors. Just like I had learned.

There would have been a good breakfast this morning, 225 years ago. Oct. 1, 1787. Dawn in Nantasket Roads. Aboard the ship Columbia RedivivaRobert Haswell would have looked to Hull village, his boyhood home. Until his father, a Loyalist, and the entire family was moved inland and placed under house arrest. Exchanged for American POWs, the Haswells would spend the rest of the war in England and on the brink of utter destitution.

Somehow, 10 years later, he found himself at age 19 as third officer aboard the first American ship to circle the globe. Having come down from Castle Roads at the entrance to the inner harbor the day before, the Columbia Expedition would be leaving Boston Harbor on its groundbreaking voyage that morning.

Wind turbine at Pemberton Point, Hull, Massachusetts

I’d gotten here just a few minutes before dawn. Leaving from Chatham at 4:30, I’d gotten here in a little under two hours. I had pulled up to the Point, right below the spinning blades of Hull’s windmill, and then headed up to Fort Revere.

From high atop this hill, all of Boston Harbor and its approaches from Massachusetts Bay are possible. The sun was about to rise, and the rain and clouds that had bedeviled us through the weekend were rapidly diminishing. The light wasfantastic. Boston Light, across Nantasket Roads, blinked on and off, and I tried to time my camera phone to the blinking. Kept missing. Still got some gorgeous shots.

As the rays of sun streamed across the harbor, they caught a cruise ship heading in from the sea. Its white hull and upper decks lit up with a golden-ivory luminescence. An American Airlines jet, having taken off from Logan, passed directly overhead of the Fort, the flagpole and me. And for all this modernity, the one difference I seized on was “the tide right now is coming in. Back then, it would have been going out.”

To get the 212-ton Columbia out of the harbor easily, that is.

I hadn’t come to Hull to talk to anyone. I’d been here four years ago, with Kane Stanton of Harwich, as we took the ferry from Long Wharf to here. We’d just started our journey following John Kendrick and the Columbia around the world. I’d told Kane we needed to get out to the places where history happened.

Looking across Nantasket Roads from Fort Revere to Boston Light

As Peter Drummey, librarian at the Massachusetts Historical Society, had told me, perhaps the reason that this story hadn’t taken hold in public consciousness, especially with young people, was it had been approached with too much reverence for either of its main actors, John Kendrick and Robert Gray. “A guerrilla history lesson” is how Kane described our approach.

As we’ve found out irreverence works. It opens doors and minds.

But that’s not why I came to Hull this morning. I felt the best way to remember all the men of Columbia, John Kendrick especially, was to see what they saw that morning that they set out to open the world to us all.

To see the sun rise reflect off Boston Light as it blinks on and off. To dip my hands into the water of Nantasket Roads at dawn and feel the temperature on the first day of October. To watch the comings and goings of the small boats of the harbor and the massive freighters out at sea. And to try to think about what our unreliable narrator, Robert Haswell, surrounded and commanded by men who had captured British merchant vessels and made out pretty well during the war while he lived in poverty as a refugee, would be thinking as he wrote in his log book while leaving Hull yet again.

Pemberton Point ferry dock: the gate closes for the water shuttle to Long Wharf and Logan AirportHaving written about this for 17 years now, and authored an original view of Captain Kendrick as an under-appreciated actor on the world stage in my book back in 1999, I felt I owed it to him and his men. To remember them as anyone who works on the water would appreciate. To go down to the dock for a good breakfast, raise a mug and whisper thanks.

Scraping the last of the yolk with my toast, I headed off into the wind. The harbor shuttle pulled up, loaded its passengers and departed.

“Early on Monday morning we weighed and came to sail, and by sunrise we were out of the Harbour.” — Robert Haswell, 1st October 1787. A Voyage Round the World in the Ship Columbia Rediviva.

Read this and Andy’s other columns online at The Cape Cod Chronicle.

No responses yet

Sep 20 2012

Dear Governor Patrick: Remember Them All

Captain John Kendrick copyright 2012 Thunderball Entertainment Group all rights reserved.Dear Governor Patrick:

I have recently learned of your intent to declare Oct. 1, 2012 as “John Kendrick Day” in the Commonwealth. The draft of the proclamation I have seen, written by Scott Ridley, cites Captain Kendrick’s career as a Revolutionary War privateer, and, more importantly, his role as commander of the Columbia Expedition – the first American voyage ‘round the world.

Having spent the last 17 years on the track of Kendrick and the Columbia, in libraries from Barnstable and Salem to Vancouver, LondonHong Kong and Manila, writing one novel and countless news articles, and producing an ongoing series for WGBH for which we received over a dozen grants from the Massachusetts Cultural Council and Massachusetts Foundation for the Humanities, this is a topic in which I hold, clearly, a great deal of interest.

As a native Cape Codder who claims John Kendrick as a kinsman, who grew up on and fished the same waters of Pleasant Bay and the elbow of Cape Cod, and like him has gathered a crew from all over New England to travel to Cape Verde, the Falklands, Cape Horn, Argentina and Chile en route to the Pacific Northwest, Hawaii, China and Japan, it is with great sincerity and in all seriousness that I ask you to reconsider.

Please do not proclaim Oct. 1, 2012 as “John Kendrick Day” in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

This is not a request I make lightly, and I am sure other historians expert in the topic and humanities professionals would concur with my reasoning.
Log of Columbia and Washington by Robert HaswellI do not argue that this is a date unworthy of commemoration. Two hundred and twenty-five years ago, the ship Columbia Rediviva and its smaller consort, the sloop Lady Washington, were preparing to depart for parts unknown, in a desperate gamble to pull the local economy out of post-Revolutionary War Recession. An ad hoc syndicate composed of former war profiteers, privateers and slavers were brought together in the house of architect Charles Bulfinch (who designed the very building in which you are reading this letter), fresh from the Paris salon of Ambassador Thomas Jefferson.

The goal of this private enterprise was no less than to replace the old trade routes inside the British mercantile system from before independence with global trade with China and Pacific, making the very most of the open markets that lay before the new United States. Yankee ingenuity at its best.

And John Kendrick, born and raised on the Harwich-Orleans line, who had married in Edgartown and raised a family in Wareham, a successful privateer and whaler, was chosen to command.

What he did with that command,the legend that surrounds it, and the fact that he never returned home have been a matter of controversy. But controversies among academics alone are certainly not enough to deny a man acknowledgment.

Rather, there is a chapter to this story that is very dark. Upon two visits to what we know as Queen Charlotte Islands, off the west coast of Canada, Captain Kendrick came into conflict with the people who refer to their archipelago as Haida Gwaii.

His first visit ended in undisputed humiliation of two chiefs, the second in the deaths of scores of Haida. This, in turn, resulted in the deadly capture years later of the schooner Resolution by the Haida, with only one survivor.
Having grown up next to the last village of the Nauset tribe, and maintaining exceedingly cordial relations with the First Peoples at Nootka Sound and Clayoquot Sound on the west coast of Vancouver Island, John Kendrick’s conduct at Haida Gwaii seems oddly out of step. Why it happened remains in dispute. The result is not.

To the people of Haida Gwaii, this is a very painful episode in their history, with repercussions through the generations. Kendrick’s visits coincide with the breakdown in their traditional society. Christie Harris’ painstaking research with the Haida and their oral histories resulted in Raven’s Cry, first published in 1966. John Kendrick casts a dark shadow in the memory of the Haida. The wound is still fresh.

It is clear Mr. Ridley is very enthusiastic about his book on Captain Kendrick, and wants to spread the word far and wide, seeing this 225th anniversary as a good opportunity to do so. However, in his recent headlong hero-worship, Ridley has greatly glossed over the incidents with the Haida.

Haida mask, photo by Ken DuckertBut there is another man whose opinion and expertise I ask you to consider. Robert Kennedy has served for years aboard Washington state’s official tall ship, the replica of the Lady Washington, and is a member of the Haida Nation. In response to your intended proclamation, Bob observed: “The inability of ‘history’to incorporate the impact on the Native Peoples of the Americas is, to those Native Peoples, criminal, but not unexpected.”

In approaching the story of the Columbia Expedition, I have felt there was no actor in it wearing a completely white hat. I have always been clear as to my background, my personal connection to Captain Kendrick, and my affinity for his talents as a navigator, diplomat, trader and storyteller. I still see him in the faces of the fishing fleet and the flats of Chatham every day.

But when we raise John Kendrick far above us on a pedestal, we remove him from humanity. He becomes unapproachable, inaccessible.

We diminish those who worked with him, supported him. Worse, we ignore those who still bear wounds he inflicted. I am sure you would agree there is never a better time than now for a lot more understanding and a lot less bluster. Let us move with less haste as we carve him into white marble.

For more practical terms, my own concern is that anyone, myself, my daughter and my crew included, from Massachusetts heading out to Haida Gwaii from here forward will be received in the context of your proclamation. Is this how we want Bay Staters to be known to a coastal people with a long and rich cultural tradition on the Pacific Rim? Long after you leave office, the memory of your proclamation will remain in the minds of the Haida.

Columbia and Washington medal

However, the alternative is not to simply ignore this anniversary on Oct. 1, 2012 and the very real – and leading – role that John Kendrick played. So instead, I call upon you to instead be more inclusive and proclaim it “Columbia Day.”

Include in that the roles of all members of the Columbia Expedition. First Officer Joseph Ingraham, who served in the Massachusetts Navy and ended up as a prisoner of war on the prison ship JerseyRobert Gray, the captain of the Washington, whose past is still in dispute. Include all the backers of the voyages: chief investor Joseph Barrell, privateer John Derby, blackbirder Crowell Hatch and refugee Samuel Brown, as well as Charles Bulfinch. You would honor Robert Haswell, the loyalist who returned to the United States to service as a junior officer and wrote the log of Columbia. The shipbuilders of Scituate, Marshfield and Essex. And the dozens of other men of Massachusetts, and their families who remained at home, and served as the foundation of our Republic.

Robert Haswell of the Columbia Expedition


Additionally, you would honor the people around the world who had never seen an American before. Who helped the men of Columbia on their way, curious about this new democracy and its people, and who helped her return home three years later.You would honor young Marcus Lopes, who joined at Cape Verde and certainly had no idea the hardships he would face rounding Cape Horn in the tiny sloop Washington. You would certainly spark greater interest in the whole topic of the Columbia Expedition (and not just one man), as that story still lies in shards about the globe.

In the service of history and of humanity, I humbly ask you to take a broad view of the event that commenced on that morning on the first of October 1787 off Pemberton Point in Hull. There is much good to be done by your words, and I ask you to make the very most of this anniversary.


Sincerely,

Andrew Giles Buckley

Chatham, Mass.

No responses yet

Sep 18 2012

A Tale of Two Vessels

North Shore, South Shore: The story of the Columbia and the Washington

“You can’t trust anything he would have written.” Gumshoe historians Andrew Buckley and Matt Griffin turn the corner on the trail of the Columbia Expedition and John Kendrick. Columbia Rediviva: A ship built just prior to the Revolution on the South Shore. Her junior partner, Lady Washington: an old sloop built on the North Shore.

Hints at a background in slavery, but the vessel truly carrying the story is in the hands of young man with divided loyalties and a chip on his shoulder.

Columbia and Washington

Locations: Boston, Marshfield, Scituate, Essex, Massachusetts.

Interviews: Peter Drummey, Cynthia Krusell, Justin Demetri, Benjamin Dunham

Boston’s Shea Rose introduces this fourth installment of the new Hit and Run History series. “Now they’re getting to all the right places, to all the right people,” says Rose, describing the Buckley and Griffin’s progress in following the genesis of the first American voyage ’round the world.
Holding the most precious artifacts from the Columbia Expedition, the Masachusetts Historical Society is the first stop for host Andrew Buckley and assistant director Matthew Griffin. The original log of junior officer Robert Haswell, and his painted portrait are among the treasures. Then in the office of MHS Librarian Peter Drummey, while shooting a precise replica of Columbia, Buckley tells of a larger model in the most unlikely of places.

Captain Robert Gray of the Columbia Expedition copyright 2012 Thunderball Entertainment Group all rights reserved

Soon it is off to the South Shore, to talk with Marshfield Town Historian Cynthia Krusell. Lying between Scituate and Marshfield, the North River was home to Brigg’s shipyard at Hobart’s Landing. This is where the ship Columbia was launched in 1773.
Then we head up to the North Shore to the Essex Shipbuilding Museum. Justin Demetri and Buckley compare the Chebacco boat style with the plans of the current-day Lady Washington — the replica of the small sloop that accompanied Columbia to the Pacific Northwest.
But circling back to historian Ben Dunham, what was the real vessel that carried the story? Robert Haswell’s log, the only first-person account of this first voyage, is called into question. And the background of 2nd in command Robert Gray, a Rhode Islander, is tied to the dying out of the slave trade in that state prior to Columbia’s departure. Before we’ve even left home, we now wonder: Is there any single source we can trust?

Watch “The Ship” here or subscribe to the Hit and Run History video podcast on iTunes.

No responses yet

Aug 20 2012

South Shore’s Son with a Jaded Past

Life destroyed by Revolution, Robert Haswell chronicled America’s 1st voyage ’round the world

“He’s the exact opposite of Kendrick.” The 19 year-old Third Officer of the ship Columbia. A prisoner of war and refugee before he was ten, Robert Haswell was the son of a British Officer and Loyalist. HRH starts with his birth in Boston Harbor and wartime experiences during the American Revolution. Author of the log of the first Columbia Expedition, he’s maybe not the most reliable narrator.

Locations: Green Dragon Tavern, Boston; For Revere, Hull; Larry’s PX, Chatham, Massachusetts.

Interviews: Don Ritz, Hull Historic District Commission

Robert Haswell of the Columbia Expedition copyright 2012 Thunderball Entertainment Group all rights reservedIn this third installment of the new Hit and Run History series, Boston’s Shea Rose opens with a descritpion of the Cape’s Gumshoe Historians.
Creator and host Andrew Buckley and Assistant director Matthew Griffin contrast the success Captain John Kendrick found with the American Revolution with that of one of his junior officers. Robert Haswell’s dramatic fall would accompany that of his father, who refused to join the Patriot cause.
Not yet 10, Haswell witnesses the bloodshed and death firsthand in his own home situated in the quiet seaside town of Hull, near the entrance to Boston Harbor. Banishment to poverty in England soon follows.
But in doing research on Haswell, HRH turns up a record of a deed that raises more questions. Just as with Kendrick in the previous episode (The Commander), our crew heads to another registry of deeds, this time in Boston. Buckley’s experience in the nitty-gritty of historical research it put to the test as even the Suffolk Registry of Deeds seems stumped as to the document’s existence.
Curiouser and curioser, the formative years of Columbia’s Third Officer become. Hit and Run History raises doubts as to the objectivity of Robert Haswell as chronicler of this historic voyage.

Watch “The Loyalist” here or subscribe to the Hit and Run History video podcast on iTunes.

Hit and Run History logo

No responses yet

Aug 13 2012

Cape Cod’s Greatest Sea Captain

Cape Cod’s Gumshoe Historians profile John Kendrick of the Columbia Expedition

O Captain! My Captain! The man picked to command the Columbia Expedition had a lifetime of experience. Militiaman. Whaler. Privateer. Gumshoe Historians Andrew Buckley and Matt Griffin track John Kendrick from the South Orleans/East Harwich shores of Pleasant Bay to Edgartown Harbor, then over to the house on Wareham Narrows bought with booty from the Revolution.

Locations: Cape Cod, Martha’s Vineyard & South Coast of Massachusetts.

Interviews: Alan McClennen, Nancy Cole, Thornton Gibbs, Benjamin Dunham

Captain John Kendrick of the Columbia Expedition copyright 2012 Thunderball Entertainment Group all rights reservedBoston rocker Shea Rose again introduces this episode, the second in this series from Hit and Run History. Creator and host Andrew Buckley and Assistant director Matthew Griffin start off in very familiar territory – just a couple towns over from their native Chatham. Sharing lineage with Columbia’s commander, the two start with an interview with Alan McClennen, Jr. of Friends of Pleasant Bay. The big question is what lessons would Kendrick have learned at an early age here, in this remote corner of New England, that would make him the man chosen to lead the first American voyage ’round the world?
Then it’s off to the Vineyard to hunt down any records of Kendrick’s young adulthood in the whaling port of Edgartown. A snow day greets the boys as they head off across Vineyard Sound and down the road to the Dukes County Registry of Deeds.
With a copy of an ancient record in hand, and with the help of Nancy COle of the Martha’s Vineyard Museum, they’re able to pinpoint the location of Kendrick’s house during the American Revolution.
Wrapping up, a tour of the John Kendrick Maritime Museum in Wareham reveals a house that has changed little since the captain left it to the care of his wife, Huldah, over two centuries ago. Kendrick bought it with the booty from privateering in the Revolution. Buckley and Griffin follow up with an interviews with Ben Dunham and Thornton Gibbs of the Wareham Historical Society. The latter was the last interview given before Gibbs died a few months later.
This is where the Hit and Run History style really starts coming together. Ranging from one location to another, getting the interview and moving on to the locations where our characters lived. Irreverent, curious, but well-informed, the Gumshoes help us get into the head of historical figures like John Kendrick.

Watch “The Commander” here or subscribe to the Hit and Run History video podcast on iTunes.

Hit and Run History logo

No responses yet

Jul 21 2012

Midsummer Musings

Published by under Cape Cod,Chatham,Family

Lighthouse Beach ChathamAfter the Winter-That-Never-Was, everything seemed to be running two weeks early this spring. Grass was greener, flowers up, trees leafing out. Even school was let out a few days earlier than had been anticipated due to a lack of snow days (yet was still later than other towns, oddly).

The ocean never cooled down as much as it would normally in January and February, and since that’s our air conditioner on the Cape, I had a feeling this summer would be rather tough. We got off easy the previous 12 months. A very mild summer, with maybe one day above 90. Then the aforementioned easy winter. Call it weather karma or a rebalancing of the scales, we were due for a hot summer.

Now we’re in the thick of it.

Which means the late-July drought has hit us two weeks early.

Growing up here and through my various jobs, I had the privilege of seeing the very best properties, especially vacation homes. Houses with long sweeps down to the water. Tall trees offering shade, sometimes with a swing, the occasional croquet set, and random lawn furniture.

And crunchy grass midsummer. Sprinkled with dandelions and other weeds. A patch of sour grass was a favorite find. We’d loll about on the lawn, chewing on pieces of it and looking for four leaf clovers. Upon close inspection, in fact, any green patch on a lawn would turn out to be the weeds.

With the advent of underground sprinkler systems and broad spectrum weed control, it has become easy to see who has them and who is sticking natural. But what I’ve noticed of late is lawns I know for certain have irrigation systems now looking tannish this July.

The owners have turned the water off. Residences and businesses, for whatever reasons, are skipping the sprinkler. Money saving or something more? Whichever, it gives me hope.

*     *     *     *

A few questions that continue to buzz around like so many dragonflies: Where were the Chatham Lightfoots in the Fourth of July parade? Our town’s pride and joy champion jump rope team had been practicing for months for their regular spot and their performance is as much a staple of the parade as the Chatham Band. I heard rumors of a last-minute paperwork snafu, but surely a parade is for kids more than anyone. Who wouldn’t let them in?

Which local eatery will seize the opportunity to rename a favorite sandwich “The Skomal?” Piled to overflowing with alternating layers of ham and cheese.

Like so many of us, I am really looking forward to the FoodRunner truck coming to Chatham. But it seems everyone’s question is why can’t it be closer to town?

Regarding the beach access and ownership dispute at Lighthouse Beach, why is there not an article on the special town meeting warrant for a taking? Eminent domain is completely legitimate when a vital public interest is at stake. To insure public safety, there has to be a way for the town to patrol the whole beach. Adjust the lines by a few degrees and we’re done. How much could a small strip of sand, likely to be gone in the next decade or two, be worth?

*     *     *     *

We live without air conditioning. Still. With the prevailing southwest breeze coming up the Oyster River from Nantucket Sound, perhaps we have it a little easier. The summer I lived at Nautilus, on the corner of Water Street and Main Street, spoiled me forever for sea breezes. Nothing short of being in a boat compared to being one short block from the open Atlantic.

But now, years later, we still live without AC. Sure, last week was tough. We turned on some fans. Dressed in lighter clothes. Drank lots of cool liquids. Helped, a little. The solution is to find ways to deal with it. But not escape it and shut all the doors and windows. What’s the point of being on the Cape in the summer if you can’t hear or smell it? Perhaps on those occasional drives up to Boston AC in the car makes sense. No need to arrive at a play or a nice restaurant with be-swirled hair and rumpled, sweaty clothes. But that’s different – that’s not Cape Cod. You wouldn’t have gotten me outside in D.C. or New York last week.

We live without AC, still, because it is a waste of energy and money and keeps us out of touch with the world around us. What a high price to pay for a brief moment of dry, cool air. What an awful way to kill the craving for a late afternoon swim.

*     *     *     *

Summer is a time to try new things. Sofie and I were talking in the car, on her way back from sailing classes with Pleasant Bay Community Boating. Winter, we fall into routines. Monday through Friday, school starts and ends the same times.After school it is either piano one day, karate the next, or skating.

Supper, homework, bath and bed. Dump run on Saturday, and doughnuts at Chatham Bakery on Sunday. Not a bad routine, but there’s little room for growth. Especially when we’re a hundred miles from the wide variety of experiences available in a city.

Along with the extended daylight come the extended possibilities of playing outside, swimming – all the things you just can’t do most of the months of the year here, easily. One of the easiest ways to broaden the horizons of an nine-year-old is through food, though.

That’s good, since there is just so much more available this time of year. Kids eating the same thing, week in, week out can get a parent locked into real problems when traveling. So we’ve resolved to, once a week, try some new food.

“Wait, you’re going to do this, too?” she asked. Yep, even if I had tried something before and hadn’t liked it.

A big grin from the back seat. I added, “You don’t have to like it. But once you order it, you have to finish it.” After a little consideration, she decided her first attempt would be an oyster. Not fried or baked. On the half shell. The week after, eggplant. This will be fun.


Read this and Andy’s other columns online at
The Cape Cod Chronicle.

No responses yet

« Prev - Next »

Subscribe to my Feed

Add Me To Facebook

Flickr

YouTube

Panoramio

LinkedIn

MySpace

Amazon

Cape Cod Today

Lastfm

CapeCod

Book

Add to Technorati Favorites