A Feral Ski Vacation, finally

gammaski.jpgThis past week was the semester vacation in several Austrian provinces, including the one we inhabit, so we did what everyone else does and went skiing. Only we were smart, and embarked on a Sunday (not Saturday) and returned on a Friday (not Saturday or Sunday) thereby missing all the traffic, which according to radio reports (no TV, remember?) was impressive.

Austria is an interesting place to go skiing. Only 8 million people live in this country, yet it dominates the world, ski-competition-medal-wise. They take skiing very seriously here, so excuse me if I don’t crack any jokes in this post. I can’t stress this point enough – they are fucking ski ninjas here. I may as well have gone on a vine-swinging vacation with lemurs. (I am assuming here that lemurs, being monkeys, are big vine-swingers who, like, send their young to vine-swinging classes at a relatively young age).

Our daughter Gamma turns out to have a mind of her own, as my regular readers already know, and so the Austrians in my family were concerned whether she would cooperate and attend a ski school for three days. To their relief, she did and can now stand on skis and, even, slide down a slight incline on them for a considerable distance. The emphasis was on fun this time; next year she will attend for five days instead of three, and learn all the slalom and ski-jump stuff I suppose. Here’s one picture of her ski class, here’s another. In each of these, she is the orange dot towards the center.

She would not be Gamma, however, if she had not altered the curriculum somewhat, and spent most of her ski afternoons (they had two hours before lunch, then two more after lunch) sitting down in a pile of ski teachers’ coats, wrapped up snugly in more coats, watching everyone else.

Anyway.

They eat bacon raw here, did you know that? They have a type of bacon, extremely lean, cured somehow, smoked I guess, that is great on mountainous vacations. Hiking or skiing, nothing better than thin slices or chopped bits of raw bacon. They call it Speck in German. Which sounds okay in German, not like a mass-murderer the way it does in English. While Bacon sounds like an artist in German, I suppose.

Anyway. The ski trip was great. The apartment was a little small, but we weren’t inside that much except at night, when Gamma had a fairly serious allergic reaction to all the dust mites and kept us all up coughing, which was okay, though, because the fold-out couch bed was hard to sleep on anyway. (imageHere’s the bog.) I’m also blaming it for – you guessed it – my back going out again. I’m sure it was the bed and not sitting on the ski lift in the freezing cold and rain, because I only did that once or twice on my way up to the lodge to drink beer and eat Speck. And once to listen to a story-teller and a bagpipes player.

Bagpipes were a common folk instrument in central Europe until about 1850. I don’t know whether that has anything to do with all the revolutions here in 1848, or with industrialization, or what.

So everyone was skiing. Gamma was skiing with the other little kids. Beta was skiing with her mom and a friend and my father-in-law. Beta is fearless and skis well. Whew. Skiing, skiing, skiing. Sounds like lots of fun. Great sport, skiing. I may ski next year, actually I’m looking forward to it, if I can find a bionic knee by then. Because it gives you an excellent excuse to sit around in the lodge in your skiboots (I learned this trip that people look at you funny if you walk through the lodge in non-ski boots) and drink Weizenbier.

Weizenbier is a tasty brew, but only in a ski lodge in the snow. I find it a little oppressive anywhere else. Often you drink it with a bit of lemon, which is normally done when the beer might be a little spoiled – common in hot climates, like with Mexican beers – and Weizenbier does sometimes have a bit of a stink to it. Maybe there is more yeast or something. Anyway, only takes one or two of those for a decent buzz.

What else did we do? We walked a kilometer through the dark to eat at an inn, only to discover it was closed. Actually, we could tell after walking about halfway, but we refused to believe our eyes. I got a little rewriting done on that novel I was talking about. I was chatting with the English manager of the apartment complex we stayed in and he mentioned his Austrian wife has leukemia, so I spent a little time being thankful that we are all fairly healthy.

There was a TV in the apartment, so we watched a little TV in the evenings. Oh yeah, this reminds me. Actually, maybe I should save this for a post of its own. Nah. They showed a lot of German stations, and I have to say that German TV is, on the whole, the worst I’ve ever witnessed. Austrian TV is – since the market is so tiny – low budget and has few own shows. German TV manages to be far worse with much higher budgets. They have a real thing for crappy hospital soaps/dramas and detective/police shows. And they are just so bad. For all I know, French or Dutch TV is no better, but, man.

Then we packed up and drove home. My wife packed, god bless her. She had been on a business trip to Munich and joined us later, and we drove home in two cars. Everything went well, and I didn’t get lost until the very end. Actually, I didn’t get lost at all, just missed a turn, which my children were quick to point out to me. The house is still standing, the cleaning lady came twice daily (!!) to feed the cats (who had begun to go a bit feral nevertheless and had to be persuaded to let us back into our house), and we only had a small flood in the cellar while we were gone.

Ski trip

We are going skiing for about a week, in a village in Upper Austria, so this site won’t be updated again until around 8 February, when I hope to have some pictures of the trip. I am not much of a skier, having wrecked a knee skiing about 10 or 15 years ago, so I plan to accompany Gamma to her ski lessons while everyone else is on the slopes (it is common for Austrian kids to start at 3 or 4, so at about four and a half she’s not too young) and spend any spare time rewriting a novel or drinking Hefeweizen beer.

I appreciate you coming here to read this stuff, and even more I appreciate those of you who take the time to leave a comment or write a mail. Until I get back, I recommend that you visit some of those great sites in my right hand sidebar. I love all of them equally, of course, but have lately been re-discovering the sites I have linked to the longest, from the very beginning of Feral Living way back when (sometimes I have the feeling that I have been writing here for ages). Sites like Riley Dog or So Blue It’s Black. The latter is actually defunct now, Moira has stopped updating it and has started a new literature blog, which I recommend highly. Other old links that I still enjoy a lot are A Blog With a Name that Keeps Changing, Words Mean Things, Anti-Drug, Something New to Look at Every Day, Dangerous Monkey, Bauke, Garden of Eden, and Uren.Dagen.Nachten, which is in my opinion the best European blog, even if you don’t speak Dutch. I am mentioning these particular blogs not because they are better than the other ones in my sidebar, but just because I haven’t talked about any of them in a long time, although they are still all very good and worth reading, so go there now.

Finally, I’d like to mention that the Shoe Project is not dead, and is scheduled for a relaunch soon, like in February or March of this year. There will be a few slight design changes and it will have a new URL, all as yet to be determined. Besides 150×150 images of shoes, I hope to include also a short (optional) text by the contributor about the picture.

See you in a week.

Announcing the dumbster

    “Sometimes I start blog entries which I realize half way through writing them are real lame. And then I throw them in the dumbster.”

Says Pat.

I think I could use a dumbster.

I ate bread for breakfast

Cleaning up the coffee that flooded our kitchen counter because I made more than the pot would hold, I noticed that we had a mosquito in the kitchen this morning. Not one of your meek little sneak-up-on-you-while-you-sleep mosquitos. This was a big, black Alaskan-style One-Percenter mosquito with attitude, and it chased me as I chased it. then I lost it against the shadows.
Me: “Where is it? Where is it?” [clapping hands randomly in the hope of getting it]
Alpha: “It’s a mosquito, a mosquito for god’s sake!”
Me: “Where is the damn thing?”
Alpha: “A mosquito! Are you deaf?”
Me: [stop clapping for a moment] “What are you talking about? I know it’s a mosquito.”
Alpha: “Then why did you keep saying, ‘what is it’?”
Me: “I said ‘where is it’, not ‘what is it’.”
Alpha: “It sounded like ‘what’ is it.”
[meanwhile, mosquito flies back outside in search of a Rottweiler to bite]

Watching a beautiful sunrise through a filthy windshield

Yesterday was the warmest January day on record in Austria, ever, and the records go back nearly 300 years. Nearly 70 fahrenheit. Today will be nearly as warm. Despite this fact, I just now discovered, the juice I bought to drink at lunch is frozen completely solid in its little carton. However, the warm weather has brought beautiful blue springtime skies and magnificent sunrises.

Yesterday was best of all – the moon still nearly full behind me – and it was such a fantastic one this time, low and big and golden on the horizon – the skies just turning blue and the sun rising over the hills in front of me, turning the last clouds pink and purple before they dissolved. Lower down, the forest along the river still black and bare, a dense black tangled creepy mass of huge trees, with that sunrise climbing out of it. And in front of the woods, dark brown plowed fields, with the first optimistic shoots of grass and grain and the first flowers giving them a green cast. Sprouts that will be in for a big surprise when the weather turns freezing again in February.

A temporary spring. All of it viewed through a windshield caked thickly with winter road grime, salt and dirt and bird shit. And my perception moving back and forth between them – sunrise, windshield, moon, windshield, spring field, windshield, sunrise, windshield, scary forest.