(November 2021)
With the
change of seasons there's colorful leaves, cooler temperatures, and Piper
hanging out underneath the bathroom sink.
********
Let's start
with food because who doesn't like food? Wisconsin leads the nation in
cranberry production. I believe we grow more than half of the national
cranberry crop and wouldn't be surprised if there was a national strategic
cranberry reserve somewhere up north. I bought a bag of the fresh stuff and
made pork chops.
Regarding
those changing leaves, there are two maples a block over that turn a brilliant
red every year. They're really nice to see on my walk home from the bus stop in
the evening.
The scariest
thing of the whole trip was the traffic on Touhy Avenue where it seemed like
half the city was trying to get to the Edens in record time and wanted to let
everyone know they were in a hurry by frequently honking their horn.
Speaking of scary things, I got in a scary read this Halloween season – Spiral by Japanese horror
author Koji Suzuki.
Spiral was good. It picks up the day after
the events of the first novel. Knowing the events of Ring, this one
lacked the novelty of its predecessor but it was still spooky and there were a
couple spots in the story where I was genuinely frightened but couldn't stop
reading because I just had to know that the protagonist survived.
All in all,
a good fright.
If you dare
dip your toes into contemporary Japanese horror, Ringu is a good place
to start. I recall watching Dark Water and Juon and being scared
s*itless by both. One of them has an elevator scene that scared my Frau and I
so much that we simultaneously reached for each other to cling for our dear lives.
********
Last month a couple friends and I took a trip to Milwaukee to see The Hu, a hard rock band from Mongolia that we'd been wanting to see for some time now. They're not just a hard rock band who happens to hail from Mongolia; they are a Mongolian hard rock band that incorporates some traditional instrumentation from their homeland.
While they
played a lot of hard rock, there were also a few songs that were gentler and
more folky where the electric guitar added color instead of big chords. They
sang in their native tongue but it didn't make a difference. Their performance
was full of energy, great melodies, and big, thumping beats so we didn't really
need to know what was being sung.
Our next
goal is to see the German-Nordic experimental folk band Heilung in concert.
They like their primitive beats, to dress in (faux?) animal skins, and to don
antlers. They draw inspiration from runes and the paganism of their ancestors
that royally kicked some Roman butt in 9 C.E. at Battle of the Teutoburg Forest.
Hopefully they'll make their way to the Midwest sometime soon.
Last month I
attended Gamehole Con, a tabletop gaming convention held annually here in
Madison. It's always a great time. Friends from Chicagoland come up for the
occasion to join my Cheesehead comrades and me in 4 days of gaming gluttony.
Most of the
time we played boardgames. A group from Milwaukee brings their games library
over – we're talking hundreds and hundreds of games – and you can check them
out for free and play them to your heart's content. We generally play a mix of
games new and familiar.
I played
Raiders of the North Seas for the first time.
We also played a game called Red Cathedral which involves – quelle surprise! – building onion domed churches.
Take a look
at the game board:
It's pretty
neat as it involves cooperative play as well as competitive.
The
situation was looking very dire for us rebels as the game entered the last
round of play. Miraculously, though, we fought the British scum to a draw.
When I
wasn't involved with a boardgame, I was playing or running a role-playing game.
Friends from Chicago run Call of Cthulhu games – horror role-playing based on
the works of H.P. Lovecraft as the Cthulhu Masters Tournament. The game they ran this year took place at the Isle
of Wight Festival in 1970. As rock music played in the distance, we were tracing ley lines,
being kidnapped by cultists, and had our sanity strained to the breaking point
by unearthly beings hell bent on unleashing havoc upon our world.
In other
words, your usual Call of Cthulhu stuff.
I ran a
Trail of Cthulhu game. Trail is very similar to Call but with some different
game mechanics. My scenario took place in northern Wisconsin in the fictional
town of Four Pines in April 1934. The players/investigators head north from
Chicago and enter a town that sends one of its own out into the woods when
the Northern Lights appear to appease a mysterious creature. They discover that
the creature is the Wendigo of Native American lore which haunts the forests of
the north and eats people. Only it's not really the Wendigo, but the Great Old
One Ithaqua!
I made sure
that the town tavern had some folks playing Hardanger fiddle (a Norwegian
violin with 8 strings) tunes as well as some lumberjack songs on accordion for
that authentic feel. I took the songs from Folksongs of Another America:Field Recordings from the Upper Midwest, 1937–1946 compiled by UW-Madison
folklorist Jim Leary. As the players hung out at the tavern, I had the locals
telling lumberjack as well as Ole and Lena (i.e. – Norwegian) jokes. E.g. –
Ole went
to the doctor for a physical. After Ole was dressed the doctor came in and said
"I am sorry Ole, but you are very sick and have only a few weeks to
live".
Ole went
home with a heavy heart to tell Lena the news. After Ole told Lena he sat in
his easy chair and Lena went to the kitchen. Soon a heavenly aroma came from
the kitchen. Lena was making his favorite cookies! "Lena must really love
me" he thought. Ole went into the kitchen and started to take a cookie.
Lena slapped his hand away and said "Get avay! Dese cookies aren't for
you, der for da funeral!"
Unfortunately,
I didn't keep things on track and we weren't able to finish the game in our 4
hour time slot. Still the players enjoyed themselves as did I which is the
whole point.
********
Bonus photo time. Here's my father-in-law in warmer times showing off a sail he painted for a regatta.
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