The thermometer reached well over 90 degrees yesterday on
Portabago Bay,
with enough humidity to make whatever the formula for heat index is yield a
pretty uncomfortable looking number. We did a little work to pick up after the
previous night’s city council victory celebration party but mainly we just
worked on cleaning up the left over assortment of very cold bottled beer,
listened to the birds and talked about stuff that older guys talk about when
they are too worn out from the previous days or nights exertions to do anything
but talk.
Ideally there would have been a
baseball game on TV but the
satellite wasn’t cooperating so that particular piece of summer
background buzz was missing. The
river was wide and very still, a seemingly immobile expanse of mocha
colored water. Silt, imported by last weeks rain will eventually wash
on down stream, settling out of the water as the river widens and
slows. A peaceful and even a bit mysterious deep olive green will
return as it always has for generation after generation of river life.
The
Japanese beetle inside the screened gazebo kept climbing the screen, looking
for a way out, which it never did find. Smaller summer bugs and spiders and such
clung to the outside of the screen, silhouetted against the hazy summer sky, a bug world mirror of kids hangin’ out on a
street corner maybe.
If there had been a dog there with us,
he would have been laying, stretched out on his side, asleep under the
downdraft of the ceiling fan on the shaded and cool brick of the floor,
an occasional single thump of its tail signaling whatever dream he was
having.
It felt slow. It was wonderfully slow, just the ticket
for a southern summer Sunday.
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