I thank Tim for the above striking photo of the eye of a gannet who was rescued after being caught in plastic. That wide open pupil is like looking inside him. I wonder what he was experiencing at that moment.
A few evenings ago I rewatched the first James Bond film, DR. NO. I remember clearly that I first saw it when it was originally released in this country fifty-seven years ago It was near Memorial Day of 1963. I saw it with Mary, my first wife, and her younger brother, John, in Dubuque, Iowa. Mary I were were married the preceding December in our senior year in college. We saw DR. NO a few days before graduation. The day after graduation we set out to drive to San Diego in my first car a very used 1955 Chevrolet station wagon towing a uHaul trailer of stuff. Mary and the stuff have long since fallen away. I was twenty-one and filled with hope and happy that I would soon see the ocean again. It had been five years since my last summer at my grandparent’s house in Mission Beach. I wanted then the life I have led, but I did not know how it would happen. I had never even been on a sailboat. I had never had a word published. At times in coming years I doubted it would, but it did.
Being the first of what would become a multi-billion dollar franchise, DR. NO’s budget was limited. Sean Connery drove a Sunbeam Alpine in a chase scene, not an Aston Martin, but Ursula Andress was as desirable as I remembered.
Measured purely by distance I have not come far. Almost six decades later I am only 180 miles east of where I was in 1963.
After considerable consideration I have concluded that the variables of getting needed work done on GANNET and the risks of the virus are incalculable. Therefore I can either do nothing or something, and I prefer something. So I am going to fly to San Diego on July 29 and figure things out from there.
I will be considerably more exposed in San Diego than I am in Evanston. I am in the age group of greatest risk, but I like to believe I have some reasons to think I am not an average 78 year old.
Here is the GANNET to do list:
I don’t know how much of it will get done or needs to be done in San Diego. I could just haul the little boat, have her bottom pressure washed, and put her on a truck east. I am flying on a one-way ticket. I don’t know how long I will be there.
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