Thursday, November 28, 2013
Observations from the Macys parade:
-there was a band that played a Ted Nugent Song! Bucket list check off!
-all the singers lip synching disturbs me--its unfair to the bands who have to deal with the cold-#fakepuckers
-Richard Simmons flopping around like a fish on a sidewalk (more disturbing and nauseous)-was immediately followed by a Hippopotamus float---#subliminalsupwiththat?
-Uncle Si. (Nuff said)
The Kool-Aid man float-immediately I said "Oh Yeah". #oldskool
- the gal that lip synched "New York New York" probably violated some protocol and had Sinatra rolling over in his grave- #sacrilegesomeonesgoingtoroastinyouknowwhere
-reckon how many of those folks wearing themed costumes that pull the floats along took a drink this morning-they looked awfully happy in that frigid weather. Just sayin.
- the circus de solei cats were good with the trampoline-not to be confused by the Band de Solei for that St. Tropez tan...(Old commercial peeps, work with me here)
-is it just me or did CBS have everything showing EXCEPT the parade? They've gone to you know where since Walter Cronkite left...
-this concludes my report--i have been tasked to put those blue wafer thingys in the toilet since we have company coming--#spilunk!
Tuesday, November 26, 2013
Giving Thanks at Thanksgiving
It is D minus 2, or D-2, for Thanksgiving Ops. The shopping is complete, the house mostly picked up as we prepare for the Thursday onslaught for Turkey, dressing, and all the other food that I wish we would eat once a week instead of once a year. Turkey piled high, sweet potatoes, green bean casserole, pumpkin pie, gravy, and both, yes both types of cranberry sauce-- canned and cooked from real cranberries.
Both fried and oven roasted bird will be served-- and regardless of the emotional attachment of "pulling it from the oven", the fried turkey disappears faster. An added bonus this year was taking off the entire week and having not only Mans best friend JoeFish home but the one and only Pottamus Rex, esquire, is getting in some "George" time. That's only 2 reasons to be thankful but they carry a lot of weight because it adds to the number of males in the house. After tonight the "Booger" and Daniel will be here through the weekend.
My Grandyoungun, tentatively named Georgia Rose, the player to be added officially to the roster in March 2014, will be counted present even though she's not quite ready for the kids table. Hers is still baking in the Amanda oven--
So, the family will fall in-- only partial this year, but still upwards of 20 people. Everyone will be talking over each other, the television will be on, discussions ranging from education to politics to sports to the lower gastrointestinal functions and its effects from poultry, beef, dairy, and fast food will ensue.
And while I won't even be able to hear myself talk in the melee, I will look all around, see the kids lined up at the kitchen table, whose Moms just minutes before helped their plates for them, hoping they might eat---and we will all "say the grace", as Wifey puts it--and I will be thankful for all these folks, the ones that aren't with us any more, for my own "Fishies", and my own trip once more around the Sun...my stomach, like my heart--will be full.
Thankfull.
Wednesday, September 18, 2013
Rex turns Six!
Dear Rex--
6 (six) years old! HAPPY BIRTHDAY!!
What a great year you had, finishing Pre-K, playing T-ball, hitting a “home run”, and going to Destin with us for Vacation—it sure was a great year, and I am so proud of everything you have been doing!
….And what about Mom and Dad? You guys are going to have another member of the family! Like you told you’re teacher, Rex, “Either a boy or a girl, we are going to love it anyways”---
You are going to be a great big brother. When the baby gets here, just make sure to help Mom and Dad out as best you can—because it’s a brand new baby they will have to pay a little more attention to it for a time, but don’t worry because they won’t forget about you. If you get lonely then just call me…
Now you know Reximus that you are grandchild #1, and with that come rights and privileges no others will have. For example, none of the others will get to give me my Grandfather name—you chose that---as it is forever it will be “George”…any other grandchildren will have to follow suit. But remember, I was your “George” first. You know every time I get to see you and you come running to give us a hug, I always think about when I used to do that when I visited my Grandma—I know now how she must have felt then…but to reiterate, there is but ONE YOU---Christopher Riley Fisher, Pottamus B. Rex, my bestest buddy.
I am so glad we are going to your first Atlanta Braves game! I hope you have a great time—we will get our picture made at the Phil Neikro statue like I did when Joe was your age—Uncle Joe is going to do it one day with his son, and I hope you will take your son there and have a picture made also, circa 2040.
Six years old. Goodness. This next year we need to do some more of these things:
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Shoot the guns
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Camp out in the backyard again-hopefully we won’t freeze!
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Go fishing with a cane pole and some crickets
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John Wayne movies in the man cave!
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Anything you want to do that we can do together!
-
And lastly, work in your garden bed under Grammas direction—taking direction from Gramma will allow you and me to bond closer..trust me, you need to experience this it will help you in life when things get tough—then you can say, “Well, it’s tough, but not as tough as that time when Gramma……..”
That’s all for now, little buddy—see you soon—and who knows, maybe one day when we say bye to each other I might do it without crying- (Your Mom told me she gives you a popsicle when I leave—does it help? I need a 25 pound one).
Love you, Rex. Fist bumps.
GEORGE
Sunday, April 7, 2013
Leave.Me.Alone.
Dear AARP;
I will put this as succinctly and as clear as I can---
Leave. Me. Alone.
Turning 50 was traumatic enough without your constant dagger twisting mailings to me to remind me that I am not 19 anymore--I got that, honest I do. I am nifty 50, blah blah blah. I am reminded each morning at approximately 0230 that I am "old", thankyouverymuch-- however, I'd rather deal with peeing in the middle of the night than to receive one more piece of your terroristic threatening junk mail that you keep the Postal service in business with delivering to my mailbox.
I do not need your rubbish. I didn’t request it, and I am not about to join your group. Not now, not ever, even if I live to be 100. You may think I have something against Senior Citizens.
Nope. I love 'em.
They are awesome and they should be running our nation. The only time I take issue with them is on Wednesdays at the grocery store--That is Senior Citizen discount day and they are hell on wheels and will leave you for dead on aisle 3 next to the high fiber cereal section.
Look, here's the deal.
It's not about you political views, your stance on gun control, health care, or any of the other things I read about--I couldn’t care less about what AARP thinks. What I find most offensive about "you people" is the ads you have in your magazine--If we were to subscribe to your Goebellistic manifesto of doo-doo we would all be wearing shoes with those Velcro closures, over the calf support hose for our varicose veins, and "kicking it old school" in those rascal scooters while wearing the most comfortable catheter ever (that fits easily into your pocket).
Deliver me.
You people give me serious butt ache and make my prostate hurt. You can take your AARP and stick three more letters to the end of it (use velcro)---KMA.
I will decide when and on whose terms I become a Senior citizen, not you clowns. If you need to reach me I will be on my John Deere riding mower with 24 inch cut listening to "Boogie Chillun" so loud my ears bleed.
You can sign me, Fifty and needing no Velcro--
George L. Fisher
I will put this as succinctly and as clear as I can---
Leave. Me. Alone.
Turning 50 was traumatic enough without your constant dagger twisting mailings to me to remind me that I am not 19 anymore--I got that, honest I do. I am nifty 50, blah blah blah. I am reminded each morning at approximately 0230 that I am "old", thankyouverymuch-- however, I'd rather deal with peeing in the middle of the night than to receive one more piece of your terroristic threatening junk mail that you keep the Postal service in business with delivering to my mailbox.
I do not need your rubbish. I didn’t request it, and I am not about to join your group. Not now, not ever, even if I live to be 100. You may think I have something against Senior Citizens.
Nope. I love 'em.
They are awesome and they should be running our nation. The only time I take issue with them is on Wednesdays at the grocery store--That is Senior Citizen discount day and they are hell on wheels and will leave you for dead on aisle 3 next to the high fiber cereal section.
Look, here's the deal.
It's not about you political views, your stance on gun control, health care, or any of the other things I read about--I couldn’t care less about what AARP thinks. What I find most offensive about "you people" is the ads you have in your magazine--If we were to subscribe to your Goebellistic manifesto of doo-doo we would all be wearing shoes with those Velcro closures, over the calf support hose for our varicose veins, and "kicking it old school" in those rascal scooters while wearing the most comfortable catheter ever (that fits easily into your pocket).
Deliver me.
You people give me serious butt ache and make my prostate hurt. You can take your AARP and stick three more letters to the end of it (use velcro)---KMA.
I will decide when and on whose terms I become a Senior citizen, not you clowns. If you need to reach me I will be on my John Deere riding mower with 24 inch cut listening to "Boogie Chillun" so loud my ears bleed.
You can sign me, Fifty and needing no Velcro--
George L. Fisher
Tuesday, April 2, 2013
There I was......
There I was, no s--t-in the Gulf of Mexico with severe thunderstorms, lightning popping, socked in at zero visibility with a blackberry on half battery, little connectivity, a non mission capable bilge pump in a boat leaking like a spaghetti strainer--with a ‘hit and miss’ Johnson 70 hp outboard that wouldn't pull a greasy string out of a chickens ass. All we had left were 2 waters, a half pack of Gulp worms, a half pack of orange crackers, a pimento cheese sandwich, 1 juice box straw, and a curiosity about where all the sharks go during storms.
Was I scared?
Yeah I was scared--I was scared those Redfish and Sea Trout were gonna get away---
But like I said, There I was…in the bass tracker, the SS Unsinkable II, aptly named because the SS Unsinkable I (the first one) was deep sixed a couple of years ago. There are two considerations about my brother Bubba and his acquisition of fishing vessels. FThe first, is that he always gets a heck of a deal. The second is that they take on water at an alarming rate. Now I’m no expert, but I believe that an important part of Boats, and boating in general, is to keep the majority of the water on the outside of your craft.
We were underway there at Econfina State park boat ramp about an hour behind the rest of the “Econfina River Rat Man Only don’t bring your estrogen infused ass in here Hee Man Fish on Bitches Women Haters Man Club”, with a darkening sky and limited visibility—perfect if your name was Noah—Noah built at least one boat in his lifetime, and I am sure he kept the animals on the inside and the water on the outside.
Let the official record show that one thunderstorm –a doozy--had already blown in and much like the D-Day Invasion; we had a break in the weather. It is of no significance that the folks at the Marina store looked at us like we were crazy.
Rockin’ Randall James J-Bob Hatcher, my good friend, who equates to a 250 pound Swiss army knife, was at the helm. It was my job to hold on to the fishing poles and the cooler of food. We took out as fast as we could, and in just a wile were about 6.5 nautical miles away from the rivers mouth and out by Rock Island. It was where the elusive redfish lie in wait, begging to be caught.
As we cast the first time, I noticed the ever darkening horizon and glanced toward the mainland, no more than a mile and a half away. “As long as we see terra firma, Hatch, we will be ok”, I said. In just about thirty minutes of casting with no catches, rather, fishing with no fishes, we decided to pull up stakes and move closer to terra firma, as it was now barely visible….
It is ten minutes later. I am on the bow of the boat, Blackberry in hand, Google maps application draining my battery like a sumbitch. Using hand and arm signals to Hatch, we are on a northerly azimuth trying to reestablish visibility with the mainland.
Thank goodness --and the US Governments contract with Verizon-- I had connectivity. By this time Mark, Mitch, and Rodney are calling every 5 minutes asking me “Is that your motor? I heard a motor!” I really didn’t know how to answer the question—it could have been, but we never saw the other boats when we went out to begin with—Navigating and inching our way, we decided our best course of action was to get back to the mouth of the Econfina, and, weather permitting, fish on (bitches).
Another half hour later. We have made it just about half way back. Another round of phone calls as we all searched for one another. Actually, it was Mark and Rodney Searching, Hatch and I were trying to keep from run aground. Mark Calls and said cut the motor and listen for his horn—we complied. Hatch did the listening, because everyone on this continent knows I cannot hear, and amongst the essentials, i.e., fishing poles, bait, those orange crackers, water, and one of Mitch’s moms homemade pimento cheese sandwiches, I didn’t bring hearing aids.
As it turns out, Mark just about T-bones us as he comes up in his boat, saying, “Here comes the Cavalry, MFers, follow me!”---the only way we could have followed any close is if we were sitting in the boat next to him.
We went back out and in short order thru the magic of GPS, found the others, As it turned out, concurrent with our creeping back to the rivers mouth, we had been taken on considerable water--Hatch having checked the hatch once we had rejoined the others, and after some bailing and grateful assist for an emergency bilge Mark had stashed on his craft knowing THE UNSINKABLE would be plying the waters of the gulf this weekend. Had it not been for his foresight, we were about 5 salty gallons away from visiting Davy Jones Locker. In fact, the bilge was sucking more water than the propulsion of that damn Unsinkable II’s 70 hp Johnson.
Although we were still socked in with maybe 50 yards visibility, and a borrowed spare bilge pump that WORKED, we were all together and doing well. We fished for about another hour. The teenagers were reeling in fish on nearly every cast. I ate orange crackers and cussed the infernal bilge pump, which only worked on dry land.
Presently, the rainstorm resumed. Actually, it wasn’t a rainstorm. It was a thunderstorm accompanied by rain. To further clarify, it became a Lightning Storm accompanied by a heavy torrential downpour comparable to a monsoon which was also accompanied by a barrage of thunder that sounded exactly like the beginning of World War III or maybe God telling us in no uncertain terms to get off the water and do it now-- I can’t decide which.
We cranked the engines and aligned ourselves, Marks boat in the lead. That is to say, 3 of the 4 boats cranked. The 4th, the one I was in, just exercised the starter. For the eleventy hundredth time, Randy was on his knees messing with wires trying to get the motor to start. Finally it fired (insert Hallelujah Chorus here), and we again took our position of number 2 in the convoy. Number 2 was appropriate in that the boat had given us nothing but s-t the last 2 days.
But back to the downpour, thunder and lightning. It was incredible! There was no time to count one thousand, two thousand in between lightning strikes and the crash of thunder—it was kliccccccccccccctchhhhhhhh! KABOOM! All at once. My sphincter slammed shut. I think the other 3 boats respective sphincters did the same. Perhaps it was claps of thunder, I cannot decide which.
Full throttle, about 4 nautical miles back to the mouth of the river, and as we passed the channel marker at full throttle the storm only intensified. Despite the rain gear, the water found its way to my nether regions, nice and cold. My cup runneth over, my doo-lollys are nice and wet, and Randy has yelled out he has “monkey butt”.
It got so crazy all I could do is eat that pimento cheese sandwich. I wasn’t about to let it go to waste. Then I pulled it in half (it was soaking wet by this time) and shoved half of it in Randys mouth while he is still driving the boat at full tilt, barely able to see Marks boat in front of us. It was hysterical. The rain pelted us so bad I yelled out to Randy is that rain or hail?
We made it back to the boat ramp while the other boats motored to the condo. The SS Unsinkable II would be put on its trailer, as she was done for this trip.
Back in the condo, all of us stripped out of our wet clothes, drinks began to flow, cigars to be lit, and the talk of Fishing and the associated adventures from Men, both young and old, began, and lasted into the wee hours…
“THERE I WAS, NO S--T…………………”
It couldn’t have stormed any harder. We couldn’t have been any more socked in. We couldn’t have taken on any more water without sinking that damn rust bucket.
We couldn’t have had a better time had we tried.
“FISH ON, BITCHES”
Wednesday, February 6, 2013
THAT POLECAT SMELL
I picked a bad time to visit the Male latrine today, but it's the most hysterical thing I have encountered recently.
Alas, When Nature calls, you answer the phone---so off I went to do my business. At my age when summoned to do ones business it is important to take care of business lest it turn out to be bad business for all concerned. It's just good business to handle business in a businesslike manner.
I arrived into our rather large facility to discover that 2 of the 4 stalls were occupied. I have lived through worse, so I occupied the furthest stall away from the others in accordance with Man law. About the time I got settled an odor not normally found in these environs engulfed the room. Let me be perfectly clear and state, for the record, that it was not me. The odor was if someone had brought a live polecat into the latrine and began to skin it alive. Now I have never skinned a polecat but I have smelled my share of them along the highways and by-ways of our great state, so I know that smell. It has a smell all its own, and it's nasty.
At any rate, the door opens and another person occupies the last stall. The polecat smell intensifies. Courtesy flushes begin as if on cue, yet no one says a word. No one need say anything, but in another ten seconds another volley of courtesy flushes. I am doing my business as quickly as I am able, yielding to the "professionals" in the other three stalls. By this time the toilet paper rollers are turning so fast you just know there are sparks flying from the rollers. It is obvious I am out manned and out gunned, and reverse everything I did to make my exit. I complete my chore with quick dispatch. In fact the others do the same. The sound of 4 occupants pulling up, tucking in, and re-buckling is fast and furious, not unlike the firehouse in the middle of the night when the alarm sounds.
I emerge from the stall to find one of our co-workers feverishly brushing his teeth. I explode with laughter.
Whether he was brushing away lunch or the smell of a freshly skinned polecat, I know not. If I would have had some floss handy, I would have given it to him.
Friday, February 1, 2013
FISHER CHRONICLES: The "CHAP"
FISHER CHRONICLES: The "CHAP": I first met Leslie Nelson when she was attached to our Battalion for Annual Training a few years ago--at the time she was a Chaplain in Trai...
The "CHAP"
I first met Leslie Nelson when she was attached to our Battalion for Annual Training a few years ago--at the time she was a Chaplain in Training, not quite finished with all the stuff a guy or gal has to do to become a certified homogenized pasteurized bonified Chaplain in the Military---besides being a Soldier. We could all tell even then that this lady was going to be great, and in no time she became a "real" Chaplain, or "Chap" as we sometimes call them--I liked her so much that we got her to conduct my daughters wedding just after her Chaplaincy. She has been like a member of the family ever since, and came to see me at the hospital during my recent stay. She is just good peeps.
Chaplain Leslie Nelson began today's Braves Caravan festivities that were held yesterday at our headquarters with this prayer...
"Today it is my honor to open our Braves Day here at the National Guard Nation in prayer... Pray with me please...
Lord, as we come to the 7th inning stretch of this prayer today, and on a much more serious note, we would be remiss in not asking your blessings over the brave men and women who are fighting all over the world for the freedoms we hold dear. Please keep them out of harm’s way, wrap their loved ones in your grace and peace...and Lord bind their hearts together as the miles keep them apart. Let us never forget the sacrifices our service members and their families make daily in order for us to enjoy the freedoms that make this nation great...and for the victims of the storms that ravaged parts of our state yesterday we ask for comfort and provision...
Today and always...God Bless America... Amen"---
Thats OUR Chap. Great Lady, Soldier, Friend, Chaplain, and American.
Chaplain Leslie Nelson began today's Braves Caravan festivities that were held yesterday at our headquarters with this prayer...
"Today it is my honor to open our Braves Day here at the National Guard Nation in prayer... Pray with me please...
Lord, we thank you for this day and this opportunity to come together and celebrate America's Favorite pastime with America's Team! We thank you for Ted Turner's stroke of Genius in the 1976 when he broadcast the Braves to small towns everywhere and gave kids something to love more than apple pie. We thank you for the green grass of spring that reminds us that baseball season is upon us, for resin bags and pine tar, and for two of the sweetest words known to man...PLAY BALL! We thank you for nicknames like Hammer, Knucksie, Murph, and of course...Chipper! We thank you for Skip Carey and Bobby Cox and ...for Brian McCann and Freddy Freeman and Jason Heyward and the Upton Brothers, for Mike Minor and Eric O'Flaherty...for all of our hometown heroes who will be taking us to the World Series this year...thank you for guiding their hands to catch every ball headed their way, for giving them clear vision to hit em out of the park, and for blocking the sun from outfield flies...and that the umpires will know the difference between an infield fly and an outfield fly. Thank you for shut outs and home runs...for keeping the Disabled List short...and for keeping the stands filled with cheering fans who love America and Baseball...and the Tomahawk Chop!
And speaking of fans who love America and Baseball, when the Braves make it to the World Series this year, please make a seat available somewhere in the stands for LTC Fisher...and he should probably have a chaplain with him to make sure he behaves...so I'll take one for the team and be that chaplain...
Today and always...God Bless America... Amen"---
Thats OUR Chap. Great Lady, Soldier, Friend, Chaplain, and American.
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