The Adventures of Bloggard

Been Around the Block. Got Some Stories. These are Them.

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Office in a Box

03.13.2011 by bloggard // Leave a Comment

San Anselmo, August 28 2003: My voicemail company becomes temporarily closed today, as I pack the office into a box. Easier than it sounds, I’m packing four computers, two desks, and one set of shelves with stationery and toner.

In May, I contracted with a long-distance company to move our voicemail lines and equipment into a cabinet in their San Jose switching center. The installation and re-routing was completed last month, and I cleared out my equipment rooms. The business office is now portable; it can operate anywhere there’s a phone line.

Today, packing my office into boxes, is the last step.

Tomorrow, loading the Big Yellow Truck.

Then, vamanos amigos!

Categories // Looking Back

Driving and Driving

03.13.2011 by bloggard // Leave a Comment

Highway Five, August 30 2003: Today I am driving north in the Big Yellow Truck. Arriving in Mount Shasta, we will be unloading the Big Yellow Truck. Tonight perhaps we will dine at Casa Ramos. We will order beer. Last time, son-in-law Joe, age 36, was carded by the waiter. Ha ha ha ha ha! And that’s the news.

Categories // Looking Back

Packing Up Like Gypsies

03.13.2011 by bloggard // Leave a Comment

San Anselmo, August 29 2003: My son-in-law Joe is huge, with a shaved head and a little tail of hair. When Adrienne first saw him, she was aghast at her daughter Celina’s choice. But Adrienne has long since come around. Joe is great.And Joe is massively strong, so I am again delighted to have him helping me to pack the Big Yellow Truck. This will be our second and final trip, hauling home, office, shop, and warehouse to Mount Shasta, our new home as of next week. Like gypsies? Well, perhaps a bit more stuff.

Nearly everything except the beds and the shop tools is packed up in boxes. We’ve got dollys. We’ve got those coarse grey blankets to protect things, and plenty of bright yellow nylon rope. We’ve got a system of dots: Red means storage, green means shop, yellow means house. I tell you we are organized!

And by the end of the day, plenty tired. Ah, the joys of moving day!

Categories // Looking Back

Enter Ruru the Guru

03.13.2011 by bloggard // Leave a Comment

San Francisco, 1981: It was actually because of Lonesome Cowboy Tim.

Lonesome Cowboy Tim was the alternate persona of a disk jockey who’d emigrated from Houston to San Francisco, back back in the days of answering machines, before all this voicemail foolishness.

There was a phone number, and when you called it was answered by Lonesome Cowboy Tim, saying “Howdy, Buckaroos!” and then he’d recount some adventure that he and the prairie critters had experienced recently.

Since it was a single line on an answering machine, after some weeks you’d find the line always busy. Then the number would be changed, and you’d have to somehow find it again. This was a challenge, because it was purely word of mouth, yet somehow we always found Lonesome Cowboy Tim.

When Network started up the Third Ear Telepathic Answering Service, we’d not intended to have a phone number at all, since the answering service was telepathic, but the phonebook rep insisted we had to list a phone number.

So I set up an answering machine with Ruru the Guru. Here’s what it said …

“Hello! And thank you for calling Third Ear Telepathic Answering Service. I am your host and operator, Ruru the Guru, speaking to you direct from our Himalaya Hideaway.

“You know, many people have telepathed in recently, asking me, ‘Ruru, just how does one leave a message for Third Ear Telepathic Answering Service?’

“Well, it’s very simple. It’s just like using a telephone. You just lift your little mental receiver, and you listen for your mental dial-tone …

“Awwooo-ooo-ooo-ooo!

“Then you just mentally dial my number — 426 299737 19937 49972 29973 299 503 — and then I’ll answer, any time, any place. Then you just leave your a mental message for anybody, whether you know them or not, and I’ll deliver it right inside their head, immediately!

“Just remember: it’s mental.”

Categories // All, fun, Looking Back, ruru the guru

Third Ear Telepathic Answering Service

03.13.2011 by bloggard // Leave a Comment

San Francisco, 1981: Every year, to the office of Network Answering Service in the big corner flat on the second story above Geary Boulevard, came Mark Bell, the Pacific Bell Directory salesman. And yes, his name really was Mark Bell.

This was back before Pacific Bell splintered into forty or fifty companies so as to serve you better and save you so much money which is why your phone bill is so much lower these days. This was back before Pacific Bell changed personnel every fifteen minutes. In fact, the same guy came every year. Mark Bell.

He was accustomed to my odd phone book listings.

The first year I opened the answering service, 1976, I didn’t know which name would work the best, so I put five different business names under answering bureaus, to see which one people would call.

Getting the names had been easy. I’d hauled a pony keg of beer up the stairs to my third-floor studio apartment, invited Richard W. and Phil Groves and about thirty other people, and that evening we drank beer and thought up names for answering services. A lot of these names were real stupid.

But I’d settled on five — A Budget Answering Service, Network Answering Service, Sundial, Western Eclectic, and Xanadu Answering Service. As it turned out, people called “A Budget” the most, probably because it came first in the list, but that sounded too cheap so we mainly used the Network Answering Service name.

We did put up posters around town picturing a duck and saying A Budget Answering Service, with little yellow take-one cards. Little yellow ducky cards continued to surface for many years after the posters. People would call to sign up. We’d ask them how they heard of us. “I’ve got this little yellow card with a duck,” they’d say.

After the first year, in the yellow pages we dropped the names except A Budget and Network, but this year I had a new idea, so I gave Mark Bell an additional name.

“It should say Third Ear Telepathic Answering Service,” I told Mark, “and with an extra line that says: We use no phones.”

Mark Bell didn’t even blink; he just filled out the form. “And what phone number do you want to list?” he asked.

“None,” I said, “It won’t have a phone number at all.”

He stopped, raised his head to stare. “I can’t do that,” he said. “It’s got to have a phone number.”

“Why?” I demanded.

“Because it’s a phone book!”

Hmmm. He had me there. That was a stumper. So I fetched from our records an unused number, and gave it to him.

In September, the phone book came out, and there under Answering Bureaus was Third Ear Telepathic Answering Service. We use no phones. 221-3333.

On that line, I installed a message-only answering machine, and every few weeks I’d change the recording. The phone was apparently answered by Ruru the Guru, who lived in a Himalaya Hideaway, and from the astral plane provided telepathic answering service as a free public service for anybody who wished to send or receive a telepathic message.

We don’t have any real statistics on how much the telepathic answering service was actually used. I mean, just given all the daily work, it’s just so hard to keep accurate statistics, you know?

Categories // All, fun, Looking Back, ruru the guru

The Owl and the Pussycat

03.13.2011 by bloggard // Leave a Comment

London, England, 1871: Due to the current debate about the exact wording of this excellent poem, as a bloggard public service, Mr. Edward Lear’s complete lyrics are here provided —

In a beautiful pea-green boat ...

The Owl and the Pussy-Cat went to sea
In a beautiful pea-green boat:
They took some honey,
and plenty of money
Wrapped up in a five-pound note.

The Owl looked up to the stars above,
And sang to a small guitar,
“O lovely Pussy, O Pussy, my love,
What a beautiful Pussy you are,
You are,
You are!
What a beautiful Pussy you are!”

Pussy said to the Owl, “You elegant fowl,
How charmingly sweet you sing!
Oh! let us be married;
too long we have tarried!
But what shall we do for a ring?”

They sailed away, for a year and a day,
To the land where the bong-tree grows;
And there in a wood a Piggy-wig stood,
With a ring at the end of his nose,
His nose,
His nose,
With a ring at the end of his nose.

“Dear Pig, are you willing to sell for one shilling
Your ring?” Said the Piggy, “I will.”
So they took it away, and were married next day
By the Turkey who lives on the hill.

They dined on mince and slices of quince,
Which they ate with a runcible spoon;
And hand in hand on the edge of the sand
They danced by the light of the moon,
The moon,
The moon,
They danced by the light of the moon.

Categories // Looking Back

The Tough Kids

03.13.2011 by bloggard // Leave a Comment

Henrietta, Texas, 1955: About the time of the Sleuth-Hound Club, there were two tough kids in our neighborhood. I don’t remember their names, because they vanished from school some time later, so let’s just call them Moe and Joey.

Moe was older, lanky thin, and not very smart. His brother Joey was one year younger, lanky thin, and not very smart, too. They were often dirty, often badly clothed, and they gaped in dim wonder at the schooling process. One day, Mrs. Gilbert asked Joey to conjugate the verb ‘Go’. Joey looked first trapped, then worried, then irritated.

“Go,” he said. Mrs. Gilbert nodded, encouraging. ” … go …” he said. He scowled. Finally he could delay no longer, and shouted, “Go, go, go!“

This was not the correct answer, but it gives you an idea about Moe and Joey. But I digress. What I wanted to tell you about was the fight.

Moe and Joey lived a few blocks away. My friend Donny and I steered clear of them, because they were quick to fight. Luckily for us, they mostly fought with each other.

One day Donny and I came upon Moe and Joey in a wild fist-fight and wrestling match. They were mostly silent, raining blows upon each other, then grappling and rolling in the sand beside the road. Occasional mutters and curses popped from the boys as they rolled wildly, turning over and over, one on top, then the other, and finally they wrapped themselves into a complex knot that only advanced yogis and young boys could manage.

Joey had grabbed a foot, and gave it a forceful twist, at the same time calling out in pain and anger. He was so angry that he twisted the foot even harder, immediately yelling again, in rage and pain.

Of course, in the excitement and the twisting and turning, the fool had grabbed his own foot, and was too stupid to realize it. Again and again he’d beat upon his brother, rolling and twisting, be beaten in turn, and he’d grab that foot, and then yelp as he gave it a vicious, painful twist.

Donny looked at me. I looked at Donny.

We left the two of them scrabbling in the dirt, and we walked home quietly, wondering what life would be like when we grew up.

Categories // Looking Back

The Return of Ralph the Cat

03.13.2011 by bloggard // Leave a Comment

San Anselmo: Russell wasn’t actually named Russell. It’s so long ago, I don’t recall clearly, but I think he was named Orville after his father. When he was in grade school, one day he decided to change his name.

He wanted to be called ‘Rusty’, like the kid on the TV show “Rin Tin Tin”. By the simple strategy of stubbornly ignoring all friends, teachers, parents, and others until they addressed him as “Rusty,” he soon became Rusty, and some time later decided that “Russell” was even better.

I admire Russell because he built a home-made hang-glider of fishing poles and plastic sheeting, and jumped off Mount Tamalpais. It worked all right, for a while, but then about 50 yards above the earth, the main spar broke, and he fell to the ground. About like falling out a sixth-floor window. He broke a collar-bone and ruptured his spleen. When he got out of the hospital, he rebuilt the hang-glider to be stronger, and jumped off Mount Tamalpais again, so that he wouldn’t have to be afraid of it any more. That’s the spirit!

So last week, I got a call from my friend Russell.

Russell lives in the hills just north of Los Angeles. He does high-end cabinetry and contracting. He is a mighty woodman, and has two grown boys of his own. One of them, Alec, makes movies these days.

Russell’s mother, Billie Jane, a long-ago crony of my mother’s, and long-time friend from my childhoot, is now very, very long-lived like all of her maternal line. Not letting that slow her down, she pulled a copy of my college story “Ralph the Cat” from some ancient file, and sent it to Alec. Alec likes it. Now Alec wants to make a movie of it. I’ve just written a letter of permission to film the story. Funny. I wrote it when I was about the same age as Alec is now, and that was a long, long time ago.

If things go well, soon coming to a Film Festival or Art Theatre near you … “Ralph the Cat.”

Categories // Looking Back

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