Monday, July 30, 2018

The LATEST


The LATEST
“My own twisted look at my visible part of the world!”

Well, after a couple of cups of Community coffee this morning, the creative juices have started flowing for some incomprehensible reason.   At least I hope it is creative juices and not something else, so here goes.

I was awakened at 0600 this morning to the sound of thunder.  I got out of bed like a kid on Christmas morning and ran to see if it was raining, and sure enough, it was.  It rained for about fifteen minutes and then QUIT!  So, now my grass will still be tan, instead of green, and the humidity will be on the level of a small, be-jungled Central American country.  Why can’t the grass just suck the moisture out of the air and solve two problems?

The word politics’ has been described as being derived from the Greek word ’poli,’ which means ‘many,’ and ‘ticks,’ which are described as ‘blood-sucking vermin.’  I recently sat down in my chair after an exhausting day running a weed-eater, and I discovered a tick crawling across my leg.  While they were somewhat common in Alabama, they are somewhat uncommon here.  This is the first one I have seen in ten years.  They are very thick in Alabama due to the contiguity of all of the pine forests that are native to that region.  About twenty miles east of where we lived in Golden Springs there was purportedly a nudist camp.  I am told most images of nudist, or ‘naturalists,’ as they are sometimes called, are beautiful people in sandals, sunglasses, hats and little else playing volleyball.  I cannot for the life of me, however, remove the image from my head of a bunch of nudists squatting around picking the ticks off of each other like monkeys pick off the lice!  

I recently completed a phone holster for a friend and was very pleased with the outcome.  I would like to make more, but there exist so many different sizes and shapes of the blasted phones that I cannot possibly afford the clicker dies, that it would take to make them.  Clicker dies are something like heavy-duty cookie cutters for making repetitive cuts in leather, paper, cardstock, gasket material, etc.  A proper clicker die, which cuts out the shape and punches the holes in the leather, costs about $450 each, and I would need a dozen of them.  I would have to make a lot of phone holsters to pay for that.  Still in all, I think it turned out well.


I have been fishing several times this year and have caught nothing!  It seems that it is either too hot, too cold, raining, windy, or whatever excuse the fish are using to not bite.  The closest I came to catching anything was a three-inch shad attacking a three-inch shad plastic lure.  I got him out of the water, but he escaped!  I need a boat, but Darling Companion takes a dim view of the idea.  We’ll see!

I have discovered that with the Internet I have become somewhat popular overseas.  I am currently corresponding with an individual from Germany who is fabricating WWI U.S. Artillery harness for his own use!  He plans on making and pulling a fake ‘French 75.  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canon_de_75_mod%C3%A8le_1897 .  Fortunately, over the years I have collected a lot of this data from generous individuals at little or no costs, so I am passing it on at that same rate.  I have been also assisting an individual from Eastern France in translating his work on artillery into English.  Between his knowledge of English, my knowledge of French, and Google Translate, we are getting the job done.  The latest one we have done is the ‘15cm s.FH 13/1 (Sf) auf Geschützwagen Lorraine Schlepper (f),’ which translates into English as the ‘150mm Heavy Field Howitzer Model 13/1 (Self-Propelled Carriage) on Gun Vehicle the Lorraine Carrier (French).’  Leave it to the Germans to not make it easy.  Unfortunately, my German is not as good as my French.  This is a 15cm Howitzer, Model of 1913, mounted on a captured French Lorraine cargo carrier and used by the Germans in WWII.  These will be released on some format, possibly CDs, in the foreseeable future.

Do you know what a ‘bezel’ is?  For the purposes of this discussion it is the plastic thing that holds the bulb and the lens of the right side-marker light on a 2004 Toyota Tacoma PreRunner.  Last Thursday I had to sit and wait on contractors fixing the threshold on our front door, so I had Darling Companion pick up a couple of the very small lightbulbs for the side-markers on my truck.  I got on YouTube and found a video on how to change the pencil-sized bulbs.  Open the hood, take out one screw, pull the bezel forward, remove the burned out bulb and replace it with a new one, rinse and repeat.  What could be simpler?  I decided to change both bulbs since they were both fourteen years old.  Well, the bezels on the YouTube video apparently had been taken out regularly and weren’t on a truck that had not had the bulbs changed in fourteen years and 198,000 miles.  The left bezel was changed with little or no trouble or effort, but typically with my record of success in all things, the right one decided to be difficult.  First of all, there is a little tab for that the screw secures to the truck.  This little tab fits over a small ridge and has to be lifted up a sixteenth of an inch to remove it.  On the right one I did that and broke the little tab with practically no effort.  Okay, this is bad, but not a catastrophic failure as there are two more spring-loaded locking tabs that hold the bezel in, but in the immortal words of Inspector Clouseau, “Not anymore!”  As I pulled forward as instructed in the video I broke one of the other tabs!  Well, after changing the miniscule light source, I replaced the bezel, hoping against hope that it would hold until I found one for sale or in a junk yard.  Friday, I went to Fort Sill to give a 3-1/2 hour class to Basic Trainees.  On the way home in heavy traffic I feel something hit the right rear wheel on my truck followed by the sound of crushing plastic.  Well, there goes the bezel, sometimes that is how the cookie, or in this case the bezel, crumbles.  Imagine my surprise when I got home and the bezel was still attached swinging wildly by its wires!  I re-attached it with that red-neck fix-all  .  .  .   duct tape!  Now the question remains, “What did I hit?”

I have been teaching classes for Advanced Individual Training (AIT) at Fort Sill for several years.  They consist of the 13B Military Occupational Specialty (MOS) the ones that actually load and fire the guns.  These are the strong ones. The 13J MOS, the guys, and now girls, who do all the calculations to fire the howitzers.  They must calculate deflection (direction), quadrant (angle), range, determine which round to use, which fuze and fuze setting to use, and which powder charge, of which there are usually seven.  In this they must also calculate the powder temperature, air temperature, humidity, any winds in the upper atmosphere and even the Coriolis Effect, which is the distance the earth rotates while the projectiles are in the air.  Needless to say, these are the smart ones.  The 13F MOS are the brave ones who go out with the Infantry or Armor units and actually see the target and call in fire and adjust it.  I like all of these and the kids really seem to respond to the classes.  I am not so enthusiastic about the 13M MOS, the rocket jockeys and the 13R MOS who handle the radars.  I don’t know a lot about their topic and they tend to look down their noses at the rest.

I am inordinately fond of and have read extensively on Neanderthals.  They are our closest human relatives and they disappeared after populating North Africa, the Middle East, Europe and East Asia about 250,000 years.  They made their departure shortly after our ancestors arrived 25,000 years ago, so one has to wonder if there was any connection.  Most people of European, Middle Eastern, North African and Asian decent have from 1% to 4% Neanderthal ancestry.  Neanderthals were short, powerfully built, had no chins and their foreheads sloped back radically.  Their faces sloped backwards with the nose in front and the forehead and chin sloping backwards.  They lived in the coldest, most brutal climate nature has ever inflicted on humankind and they thrived there for 250,000 years.  They have been called knuckle-draggers, caveman, slope-heads, ape-man and any number of other derisive and scornful soubriquets. 

One day we had a class of about sixty 13B’s and divided them up between three instructors.  I gathered my group and moved them to the starting point, I noticed one guy in the front with no chin, sloping forehead, short and powerfully built physique and large brow ridges, all the physical characteristics of a classic Neanderthal.  I thought to myself, “Self, that’s not right!  I shouldn’t think that about someone I have never even met.”  Well, the class starts and Mr. Neanderthal is bright and intelligent, very interested, asked lots of questions, made some interesting observations and even laughed at my futile attempts of humor!  So, my opinion of him, even if he did look a lot like a caveman, bolstered my positive opinion of Neanderthals.  When the class was over and the troops had departed, the instructors were gathered in preparation for their own departure.  One of them asked, “Who had the Neanderthal?”  Okay!  I wasn’t the only one that noticed that.  Still, Mr. Neanderthal made a very good impression on me and appeared to have the makings of a good soldier.  Looks can be deceiving.

We have also started to do programs for Basic Trainees.  Since these can become almost any MOS, there seems to be a lot of medics, MPs and dog handlers, spooks (Military Intelligence), in addition to a few artillerymen.  Since they can be any MOS they get a general history of the U.S. Army and not the Artillery-specific one the Artillery trainees get.  We have several stations starting at the Revolutionary War, Civil War, Spanish-American War, World War I and World War II.  There are also two scavenger hunts where teams of trainees roam around specific galleries of the museum looking for facts and documenting them on the sheets provided.  There are seven groups in all and they rotate on about twenty-five minute intervals. These classes are given using some real artifacts from the various wars, and reproductions of the more delicate and difficult to obtain items.  Instructors are attired in reproduction period uniforms.  The Rev War and Civil War guys even take them outside and fire blanks from reproduction flintlock and percussion muskets.

My station is WWI and I portray what is apparently the oldest private in the U.S. Army in that conflict!  


I wear a wool uniform that feels like two wool blankets that are lined with 60-grit sandpaper.  The standing collar is a real pleasure, as it abrades the neck, but the wrap leggings, or puttees are even more fun.  The puttees are about fifteen feet long and four inches wide and are made of wool.  It takes several minutes to don them by laboriously wrapping them around each leg, and if that is not done correctly, they come loose and become a trip hazard.  If done correctly they are miserably hot.  Fortunately, my station has an air conditioner register in the floor or I couldn’t make it through the entire three and a half hours.  The WWI Brody helmet looks cool, but is equally uncomfortable as it wobbles around almost uncontrollably on one’s head.  I like handing the students a .30 Cal Rifle, Model of 1903 Springfield with its attached M1905 bayonet.  It is about twice as heavy as what they are accustomed to.  Like the Artillery trainees, the kids seem to like the program, if nothing else for the fact that they are inside under chilled air, not crawling through the dirt and no one is yelling at them  .  .  .  well, I yell at them when they don’t move fast enough or go to sleep.  I find, however, that the modern drill sergeant does not yell nearly as much as the 1960’s version did.  Ours could all pass for Gunnery Sergeant R. Lee Ermey.

One of Darling Companion’s friends once asked me if I wouldn’t want a kitten in the house, to which I responded “I don’t like kids in the house!”  I like dogs, because the love and respect you.  I dislike cats mostly because they only think of you as ‘staff!’  Neither, however, contributes to the cleanliness of the domicile, in fact, both tend to contribute to the disorder.  Since my Darling Companion suffers from severe back problems and Kevin, that little heathen, got married and moved out, I am left to perform all of the housekeeping functions myself.  I have a year-long “First of the Month” list so that I don’t forget anything, like winding the wall clock, changing the furnace filters, and such!  I faithfully follow it so I don’t forget anything. 

Well, for Father’s Day Kevin and DC purchased for me a ‘Roomba,” sort of a self-propelled, self-parking vacuum cleaner.  It does a remarkably good job, especially under the beds, which I have not cleaned under for a couple of years, and are the domicile of dust bunnies the size of tom cats!  It requires some preparation before it can be set free to do its duty, but that is minimal.  Sometimes I have to set up barriers of chairs laid on their sides to prevent it from attempting to clean too big an area.  I do this on Sunday morning because it makes an ungodly racket around the dining room table by smacking into the chairs and clacking across the ceramic tiles.  Since it isn’t Catholic, I am not concerned with it working on Sunday.  DC submits that it is like leaving a toddler alone for several unsupervised hours.  Since it is such a hard-working addition to the family, I have decided that it is officially my “dog.”  I named it “Fideaux.”

This month’s song is entitled, “The Balls of O’Leary,” and if you have a problem with blue humor, you may not want to listen.  However, knowing my readers mentality, I cannot help but think all of you will open it.  I enclose two versions for the more discriminating:



Well, that about wraps it up.  I leave you with this thought, “The voices in my head may not be real, but they have some interesting ideas!”

Until next time, I am the ex-patriot Creole, 

Lynden T. Couvillion
Scribe