Tuesday, June 29, 2021

Globe Theatre - Dave's Midwestern Ohio Memories

Series of Guest Blogs by an out-of-state Fish Report reader originally from this area about fond memories of growing up in Midwestern Ohio during the 50’s & 60’s

Globe Theatre


On this day in history back in 1613, Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre burned to the ground during a performance of King Henry VIII, apparently by an errant cannon shot during the open-air performance that ignited the thatched roof of the wooden structure. The 3000 seat Globe had been built in 1599 by an organization led by William Shakespeare as a forum for staging his plays.


A year after the fire, the theatre was rebuilt, but was permanently closed and ordered demolished by the city of London in 1644 when the Puritans who controlled the government at the time banned all theatrical productions. Remember from your grade school history the Puritans of Plymouth Rock who sailed the Mayflower to New England in 1620 and celebrated the first Thanksgiving in the New World?


Actually they were not Puritans but Separatists, with the difference being the Puritans wanted to change the Church of England (established by King Henry VIII when the Catholic Church would not grant him a divorce) from within while the Separatists wanted to totally disengage themselves from the Anglicans.


A replica of the original Globe Theatre was reconstructed at the site of the original along the south side of London's Thames River in 1997. I had an opportunity to attend the Shakespearian play Midsummer Nights Dream at the playhouse while on a business trip to England in 1998.


The show was quite a treat to see, not only for the play but as an engineer to see firsthand how the open air theater was constructed in the round. Plus the play was not originally written in the Old Elizabethan English but instead in conventional language, which made it much easier to understand. The play was also interesting to me because it was about Greek mythology, a subject I had studied extensively during Latin classes in high school as described in this previous blogpost.


Because of Shakespeare’s use of the Old Elizabethan English, his literature does not really interest me although I can definitely appreciate his immense theatrical talent in light of the fact that his material is still popular some 400 years later. Here’s a primer on Shakespearian-speak that would have been great to have back in high school. I did read his biography recently, which actually wasn’t that complimentary, primarily because he was described as somewhat of an unethical character who did whatever it took for his personal benefit. He was especially harsh on his immediate family, depriving a sister out of her inheritance.


That all being said, Shakespeare and the Globe Theatre contributed immensely to our English-speaking culture for which I am grateful.


~~~~~~~~

Receive a weekly email whenever there is a new blog post. Just enter your email address in the designated spot below the blog and follow instructions to set up the notification.

Tuesday, June 22, 2021

Michigan Summers - Dave's Midwestern Ohio Memories

Series of Guest Blogs by an out-of-state Fish Report reader originally from this area about fond memories of growing up in Midwestern Ohio during the 50’s & 60’s

Michigan Summers


Sunday was the first day of summer and we had perfect weather on Father’s Day here in Michigan. My son and I played golf with another father-son duo, then had a lakeside family barbecue afterwards.


Michigan summers are the best. I learned that from my parents in 1966 after they spent time at my uncle’s cottage on Paradise Lake in northern Michigan as described in this 2015 blogpost. Yes, we’ve been doing this blog for 6 years and the memories are still rolling in!


My first exposure to a Michigan summer came a few years later, when Tom Jacobs from Minster (now Loramie, I think) invited me to spend a long weekend in July of 1967 for a frat party at General Motors Institute, where I was to attend later that fall. He had a brand new GTO which was promptly pulled over around Wapak for speeding. But that didn’t deter us from making my first visit to the Michigan college now called Kettering University. The fraternity had a party on the beach at nearby Kensington Park. The beach was unbelievable, full of bikini-clad young ladies whom the 30 or so frat partygoers quickly befriended.

We didn’t think to bring any sports equipment, so improvised by using a watermelon brought along for food to play a coed “football" game. The watermelon floated nicely and could be thrown almost a well as a regular ball. The girls loved it and we loved watching the girls dive after the watermelon. And that night we sat around an open fire right on the beach. Needless to say, I was hooked on Michigan summers from that moment on.

A cute girl from Lincoln Park, MI and I exchanged addresses, so I wrote her once but never received a response. A year later a letter arrived from her that had been lost in the mail for that long. The Post office was just as bad then as now! After calling her and explaining the postal delay, we arranged to meet up on my way back to school the coming fall of my sophomore year. I think of her occasionally when a song by Michigan native Bob Seger comes on the radio, because many of his songs were about summers in Michigan; for example, these lyrics from Night Moves. Bob had a '60 Chevy, mine was a ’62, but unlike the famous rocker, my back seat showed only a little wear from this venture.

Out past the cornfields where the woods got heavy
Out in the back seat of my '60 Chevy
Workin' on mysteries without any clues

Workin' on our night moves
Tryin’ to make some front page drive-in news
Workin' on our night moves

In the summertime
Mhmm
In the sweet summertime

We weren't in love, oh no far from it
We weren't searchin' for some pie in the sky, or summit
We were just young and restless and bored


That all changed during one Ohio summer that eclipses any in Michigan as recapped in this previous blogpost, the summer I met my wife. We’ve enjoyed Michigan summers ever since because after college and getting married, we moved to Michigan in the summer of 1973. The weather between Memorial Day and Labor Day is nearly always sunny, 80 degrees, bug-less, little rain and low humidity with just a slight breeze, perfect for all outdoor activities. To top it off and to really take full advantage of the perfect Michigan summer weather, we bought and totally rebuilt a lakefront home in 1989 that someday hopefully long into the future, we'll have to be carried out of feet first. My favorite place on earth is on the back deck overlooking the lake. Ditto for Bob Seger as he also bought a house on our lake.

When we travel to visit family in Loramie and Russia, we are many times asked by old friends if we’ll ever move back. I always say never say never, but...

We also liked the distinct four seasons in Michigan, even the winters, taking family ski trips up north and skating on the frozen lake, but after retiring, the warmth of Florida drew us south, so we bought a place in Naples to steer clear of the Michigan winters. My first exposure to Naples was in 1975 as an engineer at Ford while doing performance testing at their Florida proving grounds, long since sold to developers. My wife would join me and spend the days at a Naples beach resort where we stayed. We really liked the area but felt at the time there were too many old people. My wife still feels that way! It is said there are a lot of old people in Naples, but their parents live on the east coast!


Michigan summers and Naples winters; best of both world’s. A way to really appreciate Michigan summers is to listen to the Pure Michigan blurbs that are to used support tourism. Here’s my favorite:

The Pure Michigan spoofs are also hilarious, for example:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T5tJaRrZZMs

Probably the best part of summer over the years was going to old Tiger Stadium and now Comerica Park with my son for a baseball game. The Tigers were really good back then, winning the World Series in 1968 during my college years and again in1984 when my son was 5. We knew every player on the team as well as their up-to-date statistics. Arriving early for batting practice, we’d stand in the outfield bleachers trying to catch a ball, which we did once, a long fly by future Hall of Famer Alan Trammell.


Another native Michigander who also wrote songs about his summers here is Kid Rock. My favorite is All Summer Long with these lyrics:

It was 1989, my thoughts were short my hair was long
Caught somewhere between a boy and man
She was seventeen and she was far from in-between
It was summertime in Northern Michigan
Ahh Ahh Ahh


Three months of perfection coming up!

~~~~~~~~

Receive a weekly email whenever there is a new blog post. Just enter your email address in the designated spot below the blog and follow instructions to set up the notification.

Tuesday, June 15, 2021

Cicada - Dave's Midwestern Ohio Memories

Series of Guest Blogs by an out-of-state Fish Report reader originally from this area about fond memories of growing up in Midwestern Ohio during the 50’s & 60’s

Cicada


The cicadas emerged this year after a 17 year hibernation. Going back, they emerged in 2004, 1987, 1970 and 1953. However, living in Michigan since 1967, the cicadas are not prevalent here as indicated on the map. The map also shows there are numerous broods that come our of hibernation in other years in different parts of the county, plus some emerge every 13 years.


Since I’ve been living in Michigan for the most part of 54 years, my first and only memory of the cicada came in 1953 when I was 5 years old, an age when insects were especially intriguing to me. We had several old pear trees in the back yard that provided excellent shade, so that spring, my parents installed a swing set under the trees for us kids to enjoy.


I can recall “helping” Dad dig out holes for the 4 corners of the swing set so they could be cemented in place. While digging, we noticed a large number of cicada in their hard exoskeleton that were about ready to emerge from their underground hibernation. They must have liked the sweet juice from any rotting pears.


We were really intrigued by the insect as kids, and I recall Dad describing the insects emerging in 1919 when he was 6 years old. Mom was too young at the time (2) so she did not remember having ever seen a cicada before. After the insects emerged later that spring, the mating sounds the swarms of cicada made were deafening. Check out this video that captures the recent sounds emerging from my nephew’s woods. And while watching the Memorial golf tournament in Dublin, Ohio last weekend, I could readily hear the cicadas singing in the background of the soundtrack. Be careful walking in the woods at this time since cicadas are known to pee continuously creating mist-like droppings. For some reason, I recall we named the cicada katydids, but after some research, discovered the katydid is a species of grasshopper that makes a similar mating noises every summer.


~~~~~~~~

Receive a weekly email whenever there is a new blog post. Just enter your email address in the designated spot below the blog and follow instructions to set up the notification.

Tuesday, June 1, 2021

Decoration Day - Dave's Midwestern Ohio Memories

Series of Guest Blogs by an out-of-state Fish Report reader originally from this area about fond memories of growing up in Midwestern Ohio during the 50’s & 60’s

Decoration Day


Before Memorial Day was declared a national holiday in 1971, it was known as Decoration Day, a tradition that started after the Civil War when graves of deceased soldiers were decorated with flowers to honor their sacrifice for our country. So as a kid, I can vividly recall going to the cemetery with Mom & Dad to place flowers on the graves of veterans while saying a short prayer. Our family would then visit our cousins in Osgood for fun times and a chicken barbecue as documented in this previous blog post.


In honor of all the veteran’s I’ve written about in this blog, here are some of my favorite posts:





Fish Report readers - Enjoy Memorial Day - never forget those who died and served to preserve our freedom.

~~~~~~~~

Receive a weekly email whenever there is a new blog post. Just enter your email address in the designated spot below the blog and follow instructions to set up the notification.