Fun With Dean
by
Tom Chartier
by Tom Chartier
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Man! I feel
cheated, swindled and totally ripped off!
Last week,
I could see my moment of glory approaching at a steady 19 miles
per hour.
At last, Mother
Nature was handing me the opportunity to endure hardship, tragedy,
thus to rise into the ranks of literary immortality as a "real"
writer along the lines of Hemingway! Jack London! Joseph Conrad!
And maybe even… Dare I speak his name? Walt Kelly… well perhaps
no one can compete with the dizzying altitudes obtained by the chronicler
of Okefenokee.
But I do live in a swamp.
Hurricane Dean
was coming. Yippee!
Against the
sage advice of the 2.5 people I know possessed of any common sense,
I was intent upon toughing out the storm in a one hundred-year-old
Caymanian craftsman house of wood construction and zinc roof. Located
just fifty yards from the water, at an altitude of a nose-bleeding
three whole feet, la Casa de Chartier has survived countless storms.
I was told
subtle things like: "Get the hell out of there!" and:
"Think of your wife, your son, your readers, your… life!"
Yeah,
well, like I said, this house has withstood numerous storms in the
past. Hey, it’s survived the lovingly nurtured lifestyle of the
lead guitarist in a punk
rock band of ill repute, right?
Not for lack of trying, neither one of The Hounds, Little Brain
and Nimrod, have managed to shatter its foundations.
Most recently
la Casa de Chartier survived hours
of pounding by Category Five Hurricane Ivan
in 2004. During that debacle, the roof stayed put, the windows remained
unbroken and uh… inside the house flooding was a mere three feet.
Didn’t have to wash the floor that week. We just had to shovel out
the muck later. [Gardening hint: it was wonderful compost… for mangroves.]
OK, we did evacuate for that one. The shame of running away I have
yet to live down. Anyway, I figured little old Dean couldn’t be
any worse.
Besides, I
wanted the Experience Points!
But despite
being stupid I wasn’t about to be stupid. All the windows on both
floors were boarded up. Supplies, including lots of fresh water,
were stocked. Cherished items such as my extensive DVD collection,
guitars, music and books were packed in plastic tubs. In fact just
about everything was locked down above the Ivan flood line. All
the furniture was lugged upstairs and covered in tarps.
With the family
headed to the shelter, I was ready for the worst. I would hide out
on the second floor landing with The Hounds. I had everything I
needed, hard-hat, LED underwater flashlight, jugs of water, beast
jerky.
On the 19th
of August, Dean lashed Jamaica and then it turned its nasty face
west. Hey wait a minute! Dean and I were destined for destiny. That
Cat 5 storm was supposed to continue its west-northwest path. What
kind of scam is this, Dean? What, the Cayman Islands not good enough?
There’s no Pulitzer Prize in writing about a near miss! What gives?
Last week’s
hard labor covering the windows with plywood had me suffering from
tropical dehydration and heat stroke twice. I nearly passed out
while on the roof once! I could have fallen to my death before
the hurricane! Talk about irony.
I wanted the
reward of a good whopper for my efforts. And, I wasn’t alone in
my madness. A BBC
reporter in Cancun wrote that:
"One couple told me they had deliberately stayed for the experience."
See, two more literary hacks seeking a Pulitzer.
Fact is, Dean
was a whopper registering as the
third most powerful Atlantic hurricane to make landfall on record.
But by passing 80 miles to the south, Dean spared my little island
of Grand Cayman.
Well, OK,
with the family at the shelter, I had a night to myself. Big deal.
I could say this was my "vacation." I spent it
watching Apocalypse
Now on my laptop. I like "redemptive" movies
with happy endings. And then I hit the old fart sack waiting for
Dean to come a-knockin’.
I was not entirely
disappointed. The house shook and it sure was noisy. Man! It was
worse than those upper class neighbors with leaf blowers and garden
parties. Heckers, it was worse than those damned kids next door
and their rock band… uh… wait… maybe I shouldn’t talk. But Dean
wasn’t good enough to inspire the Great American Novel. Geeze! I
mean what’s the point of living on a tropical island?
Morning
came and it was time to look for the ravages of nature red in tooth
and claw. Outside, it was still quite uh… breezy? We lost yet another
palm tree. Ivan had taken out several. And looky, looky the yard
was missing! In it’s stead was a lake of stinky bog water! A rising
bog of repulsive aromatic dark brown "water". Oh the joys
of living in a swamp. The primordial stew came up to within an inch
of the door.
So how do I
get out? Fishin’ waders? The antique chiffarobe? Oh man! Well, I
could hold out but The Hounds gotta go! You know what I mean.
Ok… I could
hear the surf pounding the beach across the street and the wind
was still around fifty mph. It was not exactly prime weather for
"walkies." And yet… on went the leashes and out we ventured.
Gee… I hoped the brown mystery water was not contaminated with tropical
microbes. Who was I kidding? Of course it was! Well, that’s why
I bought all that isopropyl alcohol. The Hounds were going to love
being bathed in that!
Our little
party of three set out. Crossing the street to the beach, we came
upon an angry sea. The surf was impressive. The waves had obviously
been at least twenty feet high during the night and even now, they
were still huge. Imagine a wave as tall as George W. Bush’s ego.
Cowabunga! But… they were way too choppy and all messed up… also
like our president. Unless you’d had experience,
and were suicidal, you weren’t gonna try it.
Besides I sent my surfboard to Gaza.
As the day
progressed, things calmed down. The all-clear was given and curfew
lifted. People drove by to admire our lake. The local newspaper
took photos. They wanted Little Brain to frolic in the water. She
was only willing to snarl at them for trespassing on her turf. Good
dog!
All
my fine work to board up the house had worked like a charm… excellent
advice to those of you in the path of hurricanes. Cover your windows
with plywood! Duh! The inside stayed totally dry. But now, I had
to take it all down. Oh well, what’s some more physical labor after
a night of no sleep?
Day Two and
I was still cleaning. Low and behold, what should drive up but a
government vehicle bearing Cayman Islands officials. Aye Carumba!
Not being one to hide my faults, I stepped out and greeted them
by saying: "What are the charges?" Yeah, I stole that
line from Apocalypse Now.
First off,
unlike government officials in some countries these three
guys were friendly, unarmed and even had a sense of humor. Second,
unlike officials in other countries these three were here
to check on our safety! They knew about the flooding at the
house and wanted to make sure the water hadn’t risen high enough
to create an electrical hazard. "You don’t want to fry."
Can you imagine
that? It’s almost beyond belief. Well my friends, this is the sort
of thing one gets when one lives in a civilized country.
Neither burdened by an overblown Federal bureaucracy nor tied up
by red tape, the Cayman Islands enjoys the perks of a small government.
There’s no
monstrously gluttonous State to start wars, crush the middle class,
condemn the lower class to eternal poverty, make the elite upper
crust more filthy rich and create mountains of rules and regulations
to destroy freedom and civil rights.
Unlike
the governments in some other countries, the government of
the Cayman Islands… cares.
Maybe that’s
why they call it paradise?
So do you think
a novel that is not soaked in tragedy and has a happy ending might
be a best seller?
Elizabeth
Gyllensvard contributed to and edited this story.
August
24, 2007
Tom
Chartier [send him mail]
played lead guitar in legendary Los Angeles punk band The Rotters
for 26 years until their final appearance in January of 2004. He
has lived in Tokyo and Los Angeles. Currently he resides somewhere
in the Caribbean.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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