Thursday, October 25, 2007

Still no winner...

Yep-we still don't have a winner for either one of our little contests. And, O K people, what are you thinking? Of course the rodeo princess lives in a trailer! In fact that is all she's ever lived in. She's lived single, double and triple wided-And her ultimate dream? Well yes IT IS to live in a quadruple wide. With an upstairs.

So now that you know that our fine fearless rodeo heroine knows how to do the double wide tango, put your thinking caps back on and guess away. Thats a few less squares to get in your way.

To refresh your memory:

Question: 1 Which of the folks pictured does not live in mobile home/trailer.

Question 2: Which of the folk(s) pictured live in that fine 5th wheel, complete with the sunken kitchen, play area and mondo out door dining facility?

Guess either question score a hat.



I
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Guard rails, hazard signs and super side trips

Not long ago, a trip to Colville from here was a relatively involved trip. Coming in at roughly 100 miles (each way), the journey and the time it took to set out on such an excursion may not seem all that much in this day of 75 mph speed limits. That is until one factors that any trip to Colville included a trip over “Tiger”. That pass, better known to map readers as “Tiger Summit”-is a stunning point were the lush Selkirk Range transitions to the drier Okanagon country, with a sprinkling of Kettle River Range thrown in for good measure.

The drive over Tiger, at least back in the day, was not a speedy one. Due to posted 15 mph corners, several of which over the years have claimed numerous lives, required travelers to plan ahead just to be conservative and allow for a five hour round trip. All of this ordeal just to visit “the other side”. And that was in the summer, when the perpetual ice grooves, and shady spot skating rinks didn’t slow progress in half. In winter, that same trip to Colville might take all day.

Then the state of Washington improved Hwy 20 over Tiger and took out half those corners. Now one can make the round trip in about 4 hours. Still, that’s some serious drive time, especially if you have children prone to motion sickness, whining, or frequent urination issues. Don’t ask me how I know about all this but just trust me that I do.

Better yet, about 7 years ago, the State of Washington and the US Forest Service decided to improve Flowery Trail Pass. This is a more direct route between Colville and Sandpoint, Idaho. On the Stevens county side, the old route was a sorta paved-sorta not paved adventure. On the Pend Oreille County side, it was a total wind er up, getting dizzy yet?, goat trail for one. And just so we’re all on the same page, said goat trail was truly for one and only one vehicle at a time, if you please.

The State of Washington, along with the U S Forest Service decided this road deserved all season status, real pavement, and a true luxury in these parts, guard rails. For several summers we’ve wondered at the progress of progress. Each year at the end of our short construction season, a new section would open and everyone would make an excuse to go over to the other side. That usually included a stop over at Chewelah Casino, so not only did we test the marvels of mountain highway engineering, we gave lady luck a run for the money. On these journeys I became infamous for bragging that soon Flowery Trail would be a new short cut to Seattle. These statements resulted in strange looks and further diminished my credibility.

But I believe in the power of Flowery Trail. Apparently others do as well. The Flowery Trail, Colville, Tiger Summit loop is now considered a “super side trip” on the popular Selkirk Loop. (www.Selkirkloop.org). The futuristic quest to imagine a corner where one doesn’t visit every single gear, or a hill that doesn’t require prayer to conquer, is happily within our reach. The short cut to Seattle bit? Well that was pure icing. Still, now that the road is finished, and it’s open, it’s truly a study in living the high life. 4,000 feet high that is.

Motorcyclists are coming from all over North America to whip around those corners and catch air on the whoop d do’s. Rumor is a local ski resort is even building condo’s, homes, and resorts on top of Flowery Trail Pass, right next to 49 Degrees North ski resort. Condo’s straddling the Stevens/Pend Oreille County Line? Who woulda’ thought? Suddenly Seattle doesn’t seem that far off.

If that’s not enough to brag about, the road itself is about ten miles shorter. Essentially the Feds took so many curves and switch backs out, that these days it is far closer to here from any place called there. Post-Flowery Trail road completion, I’m only about 120 miles round trip from the front door to Colville. Which means the friends and family tour is so on. I plan on seeing cousin Stacy and the rest of the clan, far more often. That also means they can see me.

Last weekend Stacy proved this point by departing Colville and bringing her wonder child- Ayson to visit. Ayson is not your typical 6-month old. He’s mostly happy, he likes to smile, giggle and flirt. A lot.

The only time Ayson is not perpetually wonderful is when he is stuck in a car. Because of this, Stacy is the ultimate travel planner. She times the application of bottle, diaper changes, and Ayson’s naps to take ultimate advantage of the efficiency Flowery Trail Pass now affords us. Last weekend my cousin made the round trip in well under two hours. She did so without missing a bottle, a diaper change, or the end of a premature nap. Now that is a super side trip! Can life get any better than that?

Thursday, October 18, 2007

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By Request. On a Sunset Cruise.

It’s definitely Autumn here in the north county.

The last warm days finished out last Monday, in an all too brief flurry of 70 degree comfort. For the record, we got gypped. Indian Summer never really showed this fall except as a tease and then warmth came only in bits and spurts. The rest of the nation stole our last shot at a heat wave-taking what rightfully should have been our claim to warmth until at least mid-October.

Yes, we are a bit sore about that.

In keeping with that theme, I’ve also transitioned from having to be on the road at 4am eternal to not leaving the house (If I leave at all) until mid-morning. Although the head injury aftermath is still a big pain-at least I can drive again. That is thanks to the assistance of what now includes six pairs of very advanced and amazingly expensive glasses. Still the mobility feels good and I wouldn’t trade my current reality for the one I’d been enduring over the last two years. How long it will last is anyone’s guess.

Which brings me to the truest reality of living up here. In a word it’s all about the mobility baby. Everything we do, or I do, or anyone I know does, by necessity involves a drive. We aren’t talking a short hop in your car and you’re there drive either. No, this is true get thy ass behind the wheel, get yourself comfortable, and make sure you’ve used the rest room before you head out. It’s that sort of trek. It’s not so much “a drive” as a renewable commitment to the joyous act of filing a flight plan via a four wheeled, four wheel drive vehicle.

This is the very real trade off we weigh when living among scenic views, peace and quiet, Bambi, and a small number of neighbors. Unless one works in one of the few still operating lumber mills or for the feds, the standard commutes we embrace usually begin at a minimum of an hour each way. But I know of folks whose daily commute translates into two and even three hours spend behind the wheel. My current standard operating procedure comes in at about 140 miles round trip. Yet, in all that distance, I encounter only three stoplights. Some nights I can count the oncoming vehicles on one hand. The lone taillights ahead of me, or headlights behind me, don’t even register

In winter, the standard round trip could easily extend another 40 miles. Especially as this or that route gets shut down, mowed down, or blown down. Each inch or two of snow slows progress substantially. A three hour round trip becomes six, or seven or eight or worse results in not getting home altogether. There’s the standard issue wool blanket laying on the back seat, the stash of granola bars in the glove box, and never less than a half a tank of diesel-just in case God decides to afford one the opportunity to spend the night stranded somewhere between Post Falls, Spirit Lake, Furport, and nowhere. Welcome to my private Idaho’s reenactment of a Snow Globe.

My neverending quest to turn my windshield THX and IMAX recently incorporated the wonders Sirius Satellite Radio. Complete with dance channels, Howard Stern Channels, News Channels, and even a gay channel-the keeping up with the changing times, “OUTQ” radio.

For the first few weeks after I installed Sirius, I didn’t listen to OUTQ. Can you blame a guy who has 200 channels of the best kind of audio stimulation ever created, to initially pass on the gay channel? But eventually even I’d had too much of a good thing and needed a break from dance and trance and country western. When I finally tuned into OUTQ, I hit the big time, catching a Sunday night romance round up called Sunset Cruise.

I wasn’t expecting to hear Michael W. Smith singing Friends. Mark Weigle singing “The Truth Is”. And there were real live gay people calling in and dedicating songs to their significant others and best friends and ex’s. Although this wasn’t the land of the eternal Amy Grant hymn, it sure seemed a good, close, second best.

I am forty- uh- something years old. I have never dedicated a song to someone I love. Never on the radio. Never in person. In fact, I haven’t even enjoyed the company of a partner that likes to dance in over 20 years. Not since my first partner, which was way back when they were first transitioning away from the eight track. And yet right there, in front of my very ears, and on the Sabbath even, men were in the midst of dedicating love songs to one another. I heard songs from truckers to trucker. I listened as separated friends offered tunes to other distant friends. I heard Dykes with a tender spot confess their affection to lipstickers with eyeliner smudges. All of them seemed hell bent on joining in the mood. I’d discovered a very extended remix of We Are the Gay World.

As tune after tune lit up the night, I listened, admittedly befuddled by this strange turn of events. I wasn’t expecting any of this. A dedication show for same sex couples and their admirers? I mean who would have thunk? Could this be a rerun of the prom I never went to?

I kept checking the radio dial in disbelief. Driving deeper into the night, the lights of Spokane, then Coeur D’Alene, then Rathdrum faded. The mountains emerged, their contours shaped by the city lights now behind them. The stars joined their chorus. Traffic thinned, and then thinned again, until finally only one set of tail lights broke the night, miles ahead of me.

I had the craziest thought. I wanted to dedicate something to Kevin but I couldn’t think of a single song. I kept debating this. Should I call? Was it too late? Was the show nearly over? A DJ named Paul spoke between the songs and the dedications.

Maybe this was a sign. God wanted me to call. After all, this weekend marked our second anniversary.

The dj’s voice was encouraging. Go ahead. Call in. There’s still time. But would I have any cell reception? Once past Spirit Lake, the highway drops into a fifteen minute hole of no coverage.

I dialed.

I pushed send.

The phone shook in my hand.

I worried about wrecking.

God don’t let me sound like a dork. Please let it be busy. And then it was too late.

I was on my way to the ex trucker forever dorker haul of shame.

“Good Evening, What Can We Play for You Tonight on Sunset Cruise?”

I stumbled forward, feeling like I’d just asked my first guy ever to dance. I was sweating. My heart raced. This was so not very butch. Not at all alpha male.

“Could you play Love at the Five and Dime?” It’s by….

Oh my freaking God.

The artist’s name. Gone from my lips. The name of the singer had just vanished out of my mind. I could not even believe this was happening to me. How could I suddenly not remember the name of the performer? No way. Ding ding, hello. How could I be so lame? How does anyone forget the name of the very singer who sings one of their most very favorite songs? That’s like forgetting the name of your parents or Jesus or your sister.

I stumbled on. This is because basically I have no pride. I’m not smart enough to just hang up or throw the phone out the window at 65 mph. Oh no, not me. I kept on, ”It’s by the same artist who wrote songs for Suzy Bogus and I….”

Dorkdom. I was going to never live this down. Forever sentenced to the land of eternal ditz. DOH. And no, I couldn’t be content to just make an idiot out of myself on the local station. Oh no. I had to go for the big time. Let’s bomb on satellite radio, in front of an entire nation of fellow gay men and women. And don’t forget the entire frigging universe. Everyone would know. Even the aliens, in their spiffy UFO’s could hear me.

Then a worse thought hit. What if I blanked on my boyfriend’s name?

Kevin, Kevin Kevin-I kept repeating his name just in case.

Only an idiot could forget the name of a performer of a favorite song when calling a dedication line. Especially when that idiot had been to her concerts. And had every single album she’d ever made and knew every line of the song “Love at the Five and Dime”.

The DJ was considerate. Sympathetic even.

“I can find it by typing in the song title. It’s Love at the Five and Dime, right?”

“Yeah-I’m sure of that.” Which now I really wasn’t. Not anymore. Especially as some other equally wonderful song that I knew I knew- but the title I suddenly couldn’t remember, was playing in the background.

“If not, would you like another country song?”

Crap. It hit me like I’d just landed on a guest taping of Queer Eye for the Repressed Gay Guy. What was I thinking? Had I really just requested a country song on a gay radio program? Not a Bette M or a Barbara S or Whitney H song, but a real country song? I was so going to gay hell. A place completely devoid of trance, or dance or gay love songs. I was going straight to the land of eternal George Strait.

“And what’s your name?” It was the dj again.

“Tim”. There it was done. My fate was sealed.

“And is this going out to anyone special tonight?”

“Kevin!” I dang near shouted it. “I’d just like to thank him for the last two years and let him know I love him.” All my words blurred together. I sounded completely senseless.

The dj thanked me for calling. Then it was over. I instantly knew what it must feel like to be a hunter gatherer type and shoot yourself in the balls. On a national TV hunting show.

I prayed for a blackout to hit the program studios.

I looked at the cell phone. No reception. It was too late. I couldn’t call DJ Paul back. I couldn’t beg the DJ to please, please, please just erase the call.

Instead I turned down the radio dial. But I kept listening nevertheless.

I suspect this is because this is what humans must do. We have this sick fascination with seeing ourselves in all our not so glorious glory. Like giving last instructions on how we should look at our funeral or making sure that our driver’s license picture is good. Worse, even when we royally mess up, we humans are fascinated with seeing just how bad it really is.

So I admit it. I listened very hard. Even though the volume was pretty low.

The music ended and the dj came back on.

Overhead the stars twinkled and I emerged from a thick forested downgrade and entered a wide open meadow. Small banks of fog caught the light and seemed almost magical. A south-bound semi blinked his clearance lights to say hello, and then he was gone, already fading into the low slung fog covering the highway behind me. I lost sight of him in my mirrors and a five mile straight stretch loomed ahead. On every side, tall dark mountains became an oppressive horizon. Only occasionally would some lone light from a warm home or ranch or break through.

Then, there it was, my voice. “Oh gawd”, I groaned, sliding lower into the seat as the seatbelt touched my neck. As much as I wanted to turn the radio off I couldn’t. This was going to be like every single one of my worst dates. Awkward. Unfinished. Messy.

The dj spoke. I listened. Everything I heard was different. I sat up in my seat. The dj had edited the request. I sounded like I actually knew what I was talking about. In fact, if I didn’t know any better, I could even hear a tinge of alpha male. Faint yes, but it was there just the same. Wouldn’t the dykes be jealous of that!

And then there she was, Kathy Mattea, singing for all she was worth. Breaking the night silence and educating the gay world all about Love at the Five and Dime.

He’d found the song. I am not even shitting you.

I couldn’t help but smile. Even as the highway opened up ahead of me and the Selkirk Crest came into view. The song played, it was just as sweet and wonderful as I’d remembered it.

I was shaking again. Beaming really. I realized I’d done it. I’d dedicated a song to Kevin. The universe had heard. Thanks for two years. And I love you from the middle of nowhere. Spoken into the middle of the universe courtesy of Sirius OutQ Radio.

Safe in the shelter of the Rockies, in a place kissed by the stars and caressed by slightest winds, the universe had heard. And she’d answered with this most amazing night on a most magical commute.

By request.

On a long after Sunset Cruise.

Monday, October 15, 2007

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And we still don't have a winner...on either contest.

And we've had plenty of guesses...Seems a lot of folks have taken to picture number one. He does look way smarter than the rest of the gang, don't he?...

If someone hasn't won by this weekend, we'll open it up for multiple guesses.

But because I've not been as good at posting as often as I was a few months back, and some folks only check in once or twice a month-we'll keep it going as it was til then...

Timbo

Thursday, October 11, 2007

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Make Mine a Double. Wide.

Last summer I accompanied my recently single cousin and her four month old son Ayson to Spokane. My presence, part of larger mercy mission, incorporated emotional support, the presence of a “man” to do the negotiating, and the reality that four month old infants are not inclined to gracefully embrace three hour stretches in a car seat. Even if said journey takes place from within the luxurious confines of a King Ranch 4x4.

Part 1 of the mission was the pawning of the wedding ring- an understated celebration of her second wedding anniversary. Part two of the mission included the viewing of and shopping for numerous double wide mobile homes- the most affordable housing solution for the newly single mother and her two young kids.

Our trip seemed to embrace the title “learning experience”. Discovering after ninety miles that, at least in Spokane, pawn shops are not open 24 hours a day, we also found that these days those in the know refer to mobile homes as “Manufactured Housing”. Never is the word “trailer house” to be mentioned.

Venturing down East Sprague Avenue, our arrival at the various display lots seemed without fan fare. Thankfully many of these institutions were already closed. Our viewing of the various option-heavy model homes went unencumbered. Not see a single salesperson interrupted our progress as we strolled from model to model. We enjoyed plenty of time to size up all the various offerings of what’s currently “in” in “manufactured housing”. Starting with singlewides, moving on up to the double wide, and finally dreaming of the quadruple wide, the three of us made quite the sight as we clambered up and over exposed grand porches, tip toed to peek inside spacious windows, and gazed toward heaven to decipher if we preferred a 4’12” pitched roof or the stately 6’12” style.

Whether to glamour bath the home up, garden tile it down, super size the kitchen or add craftsman dormers-these were the questions of the day. As used car shoppers, fast food trippers and meth dealers sped by, their curious glances confirmed that more than one passer by assumed that we were a “young couple” eyeing our first home. Innocent, naïve, and fresh from the farm, our appearance could deceive any casual witness, especially as brave little Ayson rested his head on my shoulder and a determined my cousin did the math of what she could and couldn’t afford. But, so much for the reliability of assumptions-she is definitely straight and single, I’m partnered and Ayson isn’t voting yet.

Which brings me to the rural gay community, assumptions, and our community’s representations of trailer park living. Admittedly I have an obsession with mobile home architecture. Yet I am not alone in this calling. The majority of the rural gay folk I know either live in a travel trailer, a park model, in a modular home or in manufactured housing. That would include those gays who often have the word “real” plastered in front of their professions such as truckers, cowboys, farmers, loggers and the like.

Numerous factors contribute to these trends-the higher labor expense of using contractors in remote areas, lack of skilled labor in the middle of the prairie, highly cost prohibitive travel times to the home construction site, security issues (i.e. theft), shortened building seasons, and the limited building materials choices that are available in most rural areas.

Forget the stereotypes-those porno fed visions of hot sweaty men drinking endless beer under metal awnings, those high achievers just released from doing time, still living with their mom, the over the top Canadian Comedy Series “Trailer Park Boys” or any number of other wayward working class based impressions. Manufactured housing has come a long way baby, and these days many in our community now speak fluent double wide regardless if they are blue, white or no collared workers. Hold the trailer park, please.

No matter where one travels in North America, plenty of rural gay folk live in mobile homes. Hard working, creative, and able to leap a tip-out in a single bound, many of these homo home owners could easily give the urban HGTV set a run for their money-especially when it comes to creative improvisation, creating mansions out of base models, or the appropriate tin roof color to complement any Hardie Board Siding.

Some of the men and women I know have even taken forsaken, used single-wides and in a ballet dance with come-along, lag bolts, and ingenuity, they’ve boldly gone where no HUD inspector dare travel. Others have braved high country winters hunkered down in Airstreams, or lived in log sided, metal roofed homes complete with full time generators. Because when it comes to creating fabulous manufactured housing in remote locations, where there’s a will, there’s often a gay.

And speaking of double wide diva's...


So here's the deal. one person, and only one person shown above did not have the good fortune of living in a trailer, a double-wide, or a single-wide during the summer of 2007. You're job is to try to figure out who that one person is. All the other folks pictured about truly know the difference between a tip out, a tow hitch, and removable trailer tongues. You can even click on the picture to make it bigger!

There are 16 happy campers pictured in the above pictures. The top left square is picture number one, moving to the right would be photo number two and so forth until you get all the way to the bottom right square which would be picture number 16.

And to help ya out, picture 10 is a freebee.

Yep we know-this is so way harder than playing Hollywood Squares.

The correct answer, the one we know you are dying to provide will detail who and who is not living the trailer park life. Your answer could involve one square, or it could involve a couple of the squares. We ain't telling who's who until we have a winner.

First person to guess correctly who ain't a double wide diva wins a hat just like the one pictured below.

Minus the skull and boots.
Oh yeah and if you live in Pend Oreille County, are one of the folks pictured, you're related to the folks pictured, or have dined, partied, or hidden from these mobile home magnets, you can't participate. We need to keep it fair for our far flung friends who ain't had the pleasure of spending quality time with these fine individuals.

Send your answers lickity split to highmountainranch@povn.com.




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Guess the squares

1 2 3 4

5 6 7 8

9 10 (Free!) 11 12

13 14 15 16


To win the hat!

And now for the bonus round....



Stumped by the above question? You're right-these days it IS dang hard to tell the difference between those who live the safe stick built life and those bold souls that go for that famous "double wide difference."

So for your second chance at scoring the very cool HMR hat, how about taking a guess at the following:


Two of the happy people shown in the above photo are lucky enough to live in this marvelous example of modern luxury. And isn't it just the most? What a beautiful example of convenience, efficiency, and stunning simplicity! Oh yeah baby, this is the kind of life the cul de sac clones can only dream about. A life that sports a sunken living area, a loft, a lift kit, and fun play area all in one shot. And for the record the play area is so for when the satellite tv is just a bit stale.

Where is HGTV and why aren't they all up on these pioneers of mobile living?

OK- enough hype. Just guess which two uh "happy campers' pictured above call this pretty palace their perfect playground.

Once again please send your answers to highmountainranch@povn.com.

First correct guess wins a hat.

And yes, if you live in Pend Oreille County, are one of the folks pictured, you're related to the folks pictured, or have dined, partied, or hidden from these mobile home magnets, you can't participate.

Sorry. But have no fear. We promise there will be other contests.

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Thursday, October 04, 2007

Sneak Peak


Yep, here they are-this years hats. And you can win one. Stay tuned for the contest clues.

First person to guess correctly on our little contest-well, it'll be in the mail to ya.

Expect the first question next week.

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I always tell people that the Cabinet Range straddling Montana and Idaho is where I suspect that God goes to think. Maybe you agree or maybe you don't. But I am sticking to my guns on this one.

A few weeks ago Kevin's first boyfriend came to visit. This is a photolog of Kevin and Don's great adventure. Yeah I know many of you recognize this landscape as I keep going back to the Ross Creek Cedars and Kootenai Falls. But can you blame me?

I mean if it's a good enough place for God to hang out...surely Kevin, Don and I must be on to something.

Enjoy the journey.
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