Wednesday, November 29, 2006

Seahawks over Green Bay 34 - 24

Hello,

Just a little insight to tell you what it was like at the Seattle-Green Bay Snow Bowl football game on Monday night.

When the new Seahawks outdoor stadium was built a few years ago, I had promised myself if there ever was a snow game, I would go.

Around 3 o'clock I was hesitating a bit, not wanting to get stuck in traffic from all the slipping and sliding even if it was only a couple of inches, it can quickly turn to ice and make things treacherous. Many folks from the mid-west or back east, think it it kind of joke that folks in this area get so alarmed when any amount of snow hits. Try driving on it with all our steep hills and you will quickly change your mind.

A 4 x 4 won't make much difference and it is a lot of times the folks that grew up in snow country who cause the most accidents.

Anyway I made it to town..no problem in 25 minutes.

Finding free parking was another story. I refuse to pay $35 or $40 dollars for it. I ended up finding a free spot about a miles away, and arrived at the stadium an hour before game time, after the long walk, all with out having a ticket to the game. I do this whenever I feel the urge at any game no mater how big or important, there all always people that can't make it for some reason. I picked up a ticket from a guy that had three extra and wanted to get rid of them and get in the football stadium. He wanted $75 for one but in the end sold one to me for $25. Seat was on the 40 yard line, 8 rows back, right behind the Seahawks bench.

About ten minutes before game time it started to snow pretty hard. I was sitting around many Greenbay Packer fans, some with the famous cheese head hats and a few Seahawk fans. I told them that I grew up in Iron Mountain, Michigan, about a hundred miles from Greenbay, Wisconsin and had gone to a few Packer games in the days of Bart Star, Paul Horning, Willie Wood and many others. They had top teams back then. I never made the Ice Bowl between Dallas and Greenbay, for more or less the first super bowl, but attended one game in a blizzard and 9 degrees when they played Johnny Unitas's Baltimore Colts. That Ice Bowl had temperatures around 6 below zero. I believe because of that the Supper Bowl is usually played in a warm climate or a covered dome more for the fans sake.

Getting back to the fans...It was really a lot of fun. Two guys around me drove all the way from White Fish, Montana just to see the game. They were Packer fans and always were, before the Seahawks even existed.

Man and women had moved here from Manatawoc a few years ago and I told them I have a first cousin, Doug that lives in Polaski...They knew where it was. We all cheered when the snow came down harder and starred at Mike Holgrem not wearing a hat. We all wondered why? Bret Favre was amazing when he would throw the ball 50 some yards on a dead run. Very exciting games and either team could have won, the way that ball was bouncing around in the snow. I secretly wished I was watching it on TV and could hear what the sports announcers were saying about it.

As you know I predicted the Seahawks to win 24-21 and for a while it looked like it might happen. Ended up being 34-24 and one of the most thrilling games I have ever seen. I almost cheered for the Packers and one time I did when I spaced, and thought I was in Green Bay again. Seahawks fans wondered about me for a second.

Game ended. I walked back to the car and drove home.

Some people took hours to get home depending on the ice. I-5 was totally blocked at Northgate after becoming an ice skating rink. I took I-90 and made it home in forty minutes but had to be careful of iced over passes and bridges. A few cars were in the ditch.

It is Thursday, Temps are still in the 20's and a few more inches are expected tonight. No school in most areas. In the small town of Concrete, 80 miles north of here they got two feet. Power is out and the fun is wearing off for them. No problems here at Redmond Ridge except for the ice on the road.

If you ever get a chance, no mater where you live and there is a football game, any football game in a snow storm...don't miss it.

Can you believe some guys were watching the Seagal cheerleaders more than the game...waiting for them to slip and fall. They did. Nine times.

Make a snow man for me!

Joe

Wednesday, November 22, 2006

Remembering the day Bobby Kennedy died: See The Movie

Hello,

New movie out tomorrow about the late Bobby Kennedy.

Makes me think back and remember where I was when I heard he had been shot. Where were you?

Kathy and me were married on April 27, 1968, had rented a house next to the Catholic church in St.

Ignace, Michigan and were still more or less on our honeymoon.

Kathy worked at the bank, I worked at the radio station WIDG. The clock radio woke us up to the words that Robert Kennedy had been shot. I remember saying out loud...God, damn it..not another fine man gone down by an assassin's bullet!! What kind of world are we going to bring our kids into if we have any?

When we went to bed the night before we were both full of optimism. Bobby would more than likely be elected president and stop the senseless war in Vietnam. It wasn't to be.

Nixon was elected president and the war went on for many more years with useless deaths of our American boys.

My brother is still permanently disabled after being shot by the Viet Cong and left for dead.

Had Robert Kennedy lived who knows what the world would be like today, but I'm sure much better. We wouldn't of had the protests in the streets. The Chicago police riot at the Democratic National Convention, with Mayor Daley might not have taken place. And of course Kent State and the young people gunned down by the national guard would not have happened either.

One thing that sticks in my mind about Bobby is the fact that he had enough courage as a white man to stand up to black folk and tell them how sorry he was that Martin Luther King,Jr. was assassinated.

I remember an African American spokesperson saying: That when Martin was killed most black people expected white people to come out of their homes and say how sorry they were that he was murdered. Very few did. Robert Kennedy was one that did.

Makes me want to hear the song Abraham, Martin and John by Dion Dimucci.

See the movie.

Take Care,

Joe

Wednesday, November 08, 2006

Things I almost said about the election

After spending most of the night watching television and learning that the democrats are taking over congress and most likely the senate I had some scathing revenge writing planed. Being the passionate and forgiving person I am (like most democrats) I don't hold a grudge or want revenge. It has been like that in life for me as child and an adult. I've been wronged a few times in school and at the work place and hold no animosity's towards any one. I'm sure I've done a few cruel things in my life and am certainly no angel.

I was going to say things like....George Dubya is sending Cheney crow hunting this morning (alone) so they all can have a huge eat crow dinner together tonight. Even Rush Limbaugh, Bill O'Reilly and the entire Fox News network would be invited. What a blast they would have and they could all throw up together after they ate, but I just would never say that. I know. You are saying...why not say it?

Look at all the nasty, disgracefully and out right lies the republicans have been using on the Dems. Even pounding John Kerry into the ground over a botched joke.

Someone like Nancy Pelosi took the high road, after last nights blood bath and welcomed George and boys with open arms and asking that they all work together for the good of the country, the way it is supposed to be.

Here is where I changed my thinking. I watched President Bush at the news conference this morning and saw the hurt he was feeling. I felt sorry him (even if maybe I shouldn't have) and then again thought. "He is the President of the United States of America and should be shown more respect just like it used to be.”

My father was a staunch democrat but liked Ike. Most folks did and trusted every thing he did like it or not. I'm not going to get into all the things George W. Bush should or shouldn't have done.

This might sound corny but I took this from a country song. "Fathers don't just love their country every now and then....it's a love with out end...Amen.

Joe

Thursday, November 02, 2006

It's Party Time!!!

Can't you just see behind the scenes....George,Dick, Rummy and countless others drinking and slapping each other on the back, because of the botched joke from a man that served his country, risked his life when he didn't have too, and was robbed of the presidency 04 in Ohio, John Kerry.

These guys, most of whom never even tried to kill a "Commie for Christ" or fought in Vietnam, were born with a silver spoon in their mouths, will probably dance all over Kerry's grave some day when he is gone.

If God is a republican they will have some explaining to do some day.

Let's be honest. If the draft is ever brought back, the Iraqi war will end immediately. Back in the sixties, if you didn't have enough money to go to college or your grades were not good enough to get in, you were drafted. John Kerry could have easily not gone. In the last election it was a disgrace to all whom served in Vietnam when the Republican party paid the "Swift Boat Creeps" to lie about Kerry. Hope they are still proud of themselves and are happy about all the American soldiers that have died in a senseless, idiotic Iraqi war!! In 1972 at least John Kerry had enough guts, even if he was ridiculed at the time, for telling the truth about the Vietnam war. It took over 50,000 thousand American solders deaths, and countless maimed before that debacle was over.

The last two days I've been checking the radio dial and 9 out 10 radio talk shows are joyfully and just salivating over John Kerry and his botched joke. Most are down right mean bastards, like Rush Slimball, and have nothing to talk about since the Republicans are doing so bad in the polls. If this is a free country, those folks are ruining it with their one sidedness.Thank God we have 'Air America" with Ed Shultz.(in Seattle AM 1090) Ironic that I used to work at 1090 in the 70's and 80's when they were KING. He is not afraid to tell the true story and he likes to hunt and fish, too.We also have Dave Ross on 710 KIRO who examines situations openly. When Howard Dean did his scream, estimates were it was shown on television and heard on the radio over 2 million times(conservative count)and it ruined his chances for running for president in 2004. He, of course, was against us going into Iraq right from the beginning.

What a country!!Where you can say one sentence and be ruined in politics for life, yet pedophiles like Mark Foley, rounding up teen page boys can go to rehab and be forgiven.Maybe he will run for President when he gets out since he doesn't have a job.

Just think how far the electronic world has come and not for the better in my opinion. What happened?

Remember when the national news on ABC, CBS and NBC started at six at night and it was only 15 minutes?

Very few sound bites and no radio talk shows that babble on and on about nothing. The only way to get an audience is to be cruel as hell and make light of others for their mistakes. Being in radio myself and even before I got in, it was so much fun to hear music that we all loved, together.

We at one time, could reel off the top ten songs in a second. Elvis Presley's "Heartbreak Hotel" stayed at number one for 22 weeks.

How many of the top ten songs in today's world can you name? I can't name one!!!

I know things will never be like that again with ipods, music on computers and so forth. Too bad. The kids of today probably don't no the difference. To them maybe watching MTV and seeing sexual intercourse dances seems normal?

I think I have said enough and could go all day on this stuff.

Hope the Republicans party hardy till November 7Th and have the worst hangover of their lives on the 8Th.

I know you might be offended if you are a Republican and I'm sorry for that, but the Democrats have got to stop being Mr. Nice Guy (and lady) and "Tell it Like it Is" (thank you Aaron Neville).

Cheers,

Joe

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Beware of deceptive, falling gas prices

Hello,

Isn't it great....... that gas prices have been coming down quite a bit!!! Don't be a gas sucker and fall for the the Bush administration minipulation, buddied up with the big oil companies and folks with a bunch of big time money in oil stocks, to get those pump prices down just befroe the November 7th election. I said quite a few years ago that all us American sheep would be happy as clams if gas ever got down to around $2.00. I am not! The price of gas and a barrel of oil will sky rocket after Nov. 7th, espesially after the democrats take over from the Bush debacle.

Isn't it funny, in a way. George Dubya is now saying he will not use the phrase "Stay The Course". I'm sure all our brave service men and women, boys and girls that lost thier lives in this insane war will be happy. Let alone the maimed.

Ted Kennedy, Jim McDermott and others who had enough courage to say this Iraqi crusade was another Vietnam were right. Also everything John Kerry said was right, also. Too bad Ohio was stolen from and the American citizens or things would not be the way they are today.

Just thinking about all the innocent lives, both civilian and military that have been lost because of one gun slinger.

Don't be a sucker for the economy either. The top one percent of the wealthy are doing fabulous. Midlle class and poor folks are being sent down that well known river with out a paddle.

I must give congratullations to most Republicans that have not been on Hillary Clinton's case and have transformed themselves, and are now ganging up on that evil Nancy Pelosi. What a brave bunch they are!!

They don't know what to think of Senator Barrack Obama, a good, not corrupted man with brains. They just shake in their boots when he even breathes that he might seek the presidential nomination in '08.

There is hope and let's get a good start on Nov. 7th and take our country back.

Being lied to for 6 years is more than long enough for me.

Proud to be an American right or wrong.

Joe

Thursday, October 12, 2006

Joe's Recipe(s)

Wild mountain huckleberries (strawberries or any other berries of your choice).

Recipe...

Fill container with equal amounts of:

  • berries

  • sugar

  • vodka

Shake up and leave sit on the shelf at least a month.

And for dessert, take the berries from the consumed brandy, heat them and pour them over vanilla ice cream!!

Your friends will love it.

Joe

Monday, October 09, 2006

A Story for The Grand-Girls

These are the three little princesses I refer to as The Grand-Girls... The story below was written expressly for them...

Mystery of The Vault

The Vault

by

Joe Giannunzio

  • I wrote the following story after a discussion with my granddaughters about war.
  • They asked me why are there wars?
  • I had no answer for them.

Many years ago a group of men and women got together and designed the perfect village. This village was to have all nationalities, no cars in the city limits. Just a small train where everyone parked their automobiles unless transporting furniture or heavy items to their homes. There was a huge garden where everyone planted crops and whatever was needed for all the folks living in the town including cows and goats for milk.

Guns were forbidden and any criminal act, no mater how minor, meant you were banished after the hometown jury found you guilty. If not guilty life went on.

In the middle of the village was a square with a small church (no denomination) where if you wanted to one could pray. Your choice. The children had a huge park to play in with no fear of being run over by a truck or car.

Right in the center of town square was a mysterious vault. A huge vault with a padlock. When the town was designed no one was allowed to ever open this vault and only one person had the key. The mayor who vowed never to open it for any reason at all.

The town worked out perfect for many years. The homes were built with the help of everyone and if one decided to move one could only claim the receipts for expenses. No profit was to be made.

One beautiful Sunday morning with all the children and grown-ups enjoying the day, the newly elected mayor could not contain himself and decided to open the vault. Instantly when the vault opened a huge chunk of sharp metal blew out the door. It hit everyone in sight maiming and killing many, but it hurt the children most of all for they didn't understand why? Why are children and parents being cut up and killed for no understandable reason? The huge piece of wicked tin continued down the street doing destruction all the way not caring who it hit or what it did damage to.

It finally came to rest after it landed in a small brook that meandered through town. It lay there covered in blood. On it was written one word...

WAR

Joe

Monday, October 02, 2006

Guns Have Got to Go!

I have been thinking about this for many months now and just when shooting deaths slow down a bit or I don't hear about them, I put my thoughts on the back burner. Last week with the killings at schools in Wisconsin and Colorado and now (just came over the news) Amish 1 room school house in Pennsylvania, where I don't know how many innocent children were murdered or injured, really upset me. Is there any safe place in American anymore? We just can't allow anyone to have guns (including myself for hunting) because of all the mental cases out there with them. Let's everyone get rid of them! I know you say then "Only criminals will have guns" or "Guns don't kill people kill people". It should be deranged people with guns kill people. Let's not make it so easy. Yes we will have to sacrifice a lot and take the chance, but far less folks will be killed without the access to guns.

I hunt with a bow and arrow now and it takes many hours of practice to perffect it, and 99 percent of the time if your are hunting an animal, one only gets one shot. With a gun anyone can pull a trigger with the blink of an eye, with no practice at all!!

Our football coach and shop teacher Allen Ronberg, who was loved by everyone at Norway High School, took a gun, hung it from the rafters and shot himself. We couldn't believe it at the time. Same thing for Ernest Hemming way and countless others. Without guns suicides would decrease dramatically. I have no stats on any of this stuff but know it is true.

In Seattle we had a high school boy accidently shoot his own brother last week, let alone all the gang bangers with guns shooting up cars and people and it seems like almost every day. With over 50,000 deaths a year caused by guns it is time for them to go. Even police officers can't have them unless someone is holed up and armed with one. It may be a small percent of Americans that can change our way of life but that is how it will have to be.

Look what 19 terrorists did to our lifestyle!! It is the price we all have to pay. I (and maybe you do too) remember not so many years ago, that you could get on an airplane with out even an I.D. or being searched. Now we are all searched at any large or even small gathering, weddings, football games or any sporting events and I can, even if I don't like it, understand why!!

Just a short time after the Columbine massacre, I was going to sit in class with one of my grandaughters at school, arranged by my daughter. When I got there I had to show proof of who I was and be searched before I could enter the school. At the time I was a taken aback a little and thought they might be over reacting to things. I was totally wrong and they were totally right. Sad, but that is how it has to be now days.

Just to give you another idea of how much has changed. Up until about 10 years ago many of the small 1 room school houses that existed in northern Minnesota, Michigan and other very rural small schools in the United States, would allow the high school kids to bring shot guns to school to hunt ruffed grouse, rabbits or pheasants on the way home after school.

Maybe instead of spending billions trying to make the Iraqi people free we should spend that money right here in America and help keep our country free before it is too late. Something is dreadfully wrong with our society and it needs fixing.

These are my thoughts right or wrong.

Joe

Little old wine-maker, me, er, uh, I mean my cousin Mike

Note from Joe Giannunzio: I remember when we lived on the north side of Iron Mountain (must have been 7 or 8 at the time, going down to the train station to pick up loads of grapes so Grandpa Giannunzio (nunzio) could make his wine. We never had a car or truck and neither did he so it must have been one of the uncles who drove us. He made barrels of it. I still wonder if he consumed it all or sold it to the local taverns which he was known on a first and last name basis by all the bartenders. You can still buy daggo red under the counter back there if you know the bartender. I am living proof of that. It is nice that first cousin Mike Gianunzio (son of his late wonderful father who left out one of the n's in Giannunzio) not a misprint took up making wine again. I made my typical brandy this year (cousin Jim Giannunzio's recipe) very easy. Wild mountain huckleberries (my choice or any berry of your choosing.

Recipe...

Fill container with egual amounts of berries, sugar and vodka. Shake up and leave sit on the shelf at least a month.

And for dessert. Take the berries from consumed brandy, heat them and pour them over vanilla ice cream!!

Your friends will love it.

Joe

Now here's the latest on the Gianunzio family's adventure in wine-making...2006 ................................................... Dear Friends and Family....

Well, after a fifty year hiatus, there is a Gianunzio family member making wine again. My grandfather made wine from about 1903 to the late 1950's in Iron Mountain, Michigan and sold it to his buddies around town. I remember going to his house with my dad on Saturday morning with a jug and lots of old Italian men were there filling up on red wine, laughing and telling stories in Italian. I didn't think much of it, but I didn't realize until this weekend how much fun it could be to make your own wine. I wish I had grandpa Nunzio around to teach us his winemaking technique. He learned from his parents in Italy and made quite a few bucks during Prohibition selling his version of Diego Red. Someday I will tell you about my mother's relative that worked for Al Capone during Prohibition.

Unfortunately, Nunzio didn't do what Robert Mondavi did. Mondavi's dad got tired of working in Iron ore mines in Northern Minnesota and moved his family to northern California to make wine. Today the Mondavi family controls the wine business in the Napa Valley; they are very rich and have great wines. My grandfather decided to stick it out in iron ore mining and well, here I am today.

Annie wants to be a winemaker (an enologist) someday. She will be great at it; she understands chemistry. I understand how to drink good wine (very slowly, in a nice wine glass, at room temperature and with some good pasta).

We have four wonderful neighbors (Dick and Bonne and Steve and Karan) here on Camano Island just two doors down from us who are very much into wine, so we all decided to make some wine this fall. We started with a wine making kit to practice on-six gallons of wine (some merlot), but we couldn't wait to get into it in a big way. A little idea got a lot bigger. Now we have a big Italian made crusher-stemmer that can crush a ton of grapes in a morning and a nice 21 litre press from Italy and a corker, carboys, fermenters, and lots of other stuff (so far the cost per bottle is pretty high; this ain't no Three Buck Chuck Wine, but hopefully the cost per bottle will go down as the years go by).

As of three o'clock this afternoon, we have 60 gallons of cabernet sauvignon fermenting in our basement, which after some additional work will turn into wine. We have so far this weekend picked 600 pounds of grapes from a vineyard 150 miles away from here, ran them through the stemmer and crusher today and put them in eight fermenters-plastic tubs with some powerful yeast added after crushing (fifty billion yeast cells per fermenter according to the packets of yeast we used).

After fermentation (for a couple of weeks), the wine must (right now it looks like eight big tubs of crushed fruit cocktail) is pressed and the wine (at that point only clear juice) spends about three months aging in six large glass bottles (carboys), a couple of rackings take place (siphoning the wine from one carboy bottle to a clean one to get rid of the sediment at the bottom) during that time, then the wine goes into oak barrels for about 8 or 9 months, and then we bottle the finished wine (about 250 bottles) and it gets more aging in the bottle (for a year or more). This wonderful red wine should be ready to drink in about 18 to 24 months. Of course, it is always best to let it age in the bottle for as long as possible before drinking. It will be hard not to drink some about 2 years from now. It could age in the bottle for a decade if we want it to.

We had a great time this weekend picking grapes at a huge (900 acre) vineyard in central Washington on the Columbia River about 40 miles east of Yakima in a place called Mattawa. It is a "place" to be sure; it has gas station, two Mexican restaurants, a grocery store and a cop with a radar gun that reads "Another $120 for the Town Treasury".

I have a friend whose (soon to be ex) wife owns a big winery called Preston Vineyards in eastern Washington. He hooked me up with the guy that runs this vineyard, which also supplies Chateau St. Michelle Winery and others with red wine grapes for their great award winning wines. So we got some premium grapes, and they looked like it. Hardly any bad ones as we picked them yesterday by hand (it took about three hours; the vineyard manager, Albert, stopped by and laughed as we carefully snipped away. He said he wouldn't make any money if we were on his crew. In the time it took us to pick 600 pounds, he and his crew with a machine picked 1200 tons of grapes about fifty rows west of us). But, hey, we wanted to experience the old world way of picking grapes by hand.

Albert felt bad and showed up with a Port-A-Potty for us and a recommendation for lunch in a little town called Desert Aire about four miles away. He had a refractometer and said the Brix (sugar content) of our grapes was 25.3-just what we wanted. The PH was 3.3 and the acid test was right on, so our harvest was on the money. He said "Pick as much as you want", so we went until we filled up 12 big 66 quart bins, and we were getting hot in the 85 degree sun. We took all the grapes from 60 vines in row 176 of the Watson Vineyard. Row 176 seemed to go on as far as one could see. Our little harvest was maybe about 300 feet of this one row. There were hundreds of rows in every direction.

We went to the Sandtrap Restaurant in Desert Aire after we filled up Dick's truck and our Highland with six hundred pounds of grapes (amazingly, there were no flies or bugs hanging around the vineyard or our grapes; and there were no snakes or spiders-critters that people tried to scare me with last week when I told them what we were doing).

Desert Aire is a weird sort of retirement community about fifty miles from civilization. But the restaurant had the best damn hamburgers in all of Washington state. Across the gravel parking lot from the restaurant was a motel and a business called "Retirement Solutions". It was closed; I wondered what kind of "solutions" could they dream up in the middle of this desert.

Desert Aire is just ten miles north of the eastern boundary of the Hanford Ranch, the largest nuclear waste site in North America. All around us (even across the vineyard) were the huge electric trasmission towers of the Bonneville Power Administration buzzing away at 330,000 volts per line. Now we know what makes these grapes ferment into award winning wines. The kids in Desert Aire looked a little odd come to think of it (only four fingers on each hand, like The Simpsons).

We left Desert Aire and headed for Yakima. I missed a turn and we (Jackie and I) got lost. A barrista at an Espresso stand gave us the wrong directions and we headed west for miles with Interstate 90 no where in sight. I fell asleep and woke up as we crossed the gate into Mt. Ranier National Park. We were just 75 or so miles off course! But the ride back to Seattle through the Park was spectacular. A three hour trip home took six hours.

We could just buy some damn Cabernet Sauvignon at the grocery store or liquor store and not spent last month's paycheck on wine making equipment, but it just wouldn't be as adventurous.

Our wine will have a label calling it Cabernet Sauvignon from "Isola Di Venti Cellars", which in Italian means Windy Island Cellars.

A couple weeks ago I made the mistake of trying to register this name for our "winery" with the State of Washington. My God, what a hassle. I got a call from the State Liquor Board and they showed up at our house wanting to see the winery. After a few calls, I got them to understand we weren't doing this to sell wine, just for our own consumption and for fun. God help you if you try to do something for fun and the State finds out. I learned that we can make it for home use without a license, but my mistake was filing with the State to register the name-that triggered a host of bureaucratic exercises that I had to do lots of "splainin" to get out of. And, I learned that if you want to be a winery, you have to get licensed by the state and the feds. Mama mia! Nunzio would have told them to go to hell!

Well, in two years, I promise that you will get to taste our Cabernet Sauvignon (if it comes out good; if its crap, this message will automatically destruct on my command). I have attached a couple of pictures (as you might expect this adventure is chronicled by Jackie's wonderful photos)....

Ciao....

Mike

Updated Story on the wine's progress 10/24/06...

Dear Friends and Family.....Three weeks ago, I reported to most of you that the Camano Island branch of the Gianunzios were back in the wine making business with the picking and crushing of 800 pounds of Cabernet sauvignon grapes with our friends Karan, Steve, Dick and Bonnie from a trip to a vineyard in Mattawa, Washington (the Wahluke Slope). I am happy to report that over the last 25 days, the 60 gallons of crushed grapes and juice we produced have been lovingly cared for, being stirred twice daily by the Gianunzios, Mattsons and Bushes, and this weekend, this luscious vintage was carefully pressed in our water powered Italian press in about the same time as the crushing (about 4 hours). The weather broke here in the gloomy Northwest, so it was time to press the must. We did the pressing outside under our deck, where the crushing was done. We filled up tub after tub of Isola di Vento Estates Cabernet Sauvignon (Wahluke Slope Appellation, Washington State). We are calling our little "winery", Isola di Vento Estates, translation from Italian is "Windy Island Estates". The nouveau wine was then siphoned into six glass carboys (large glass containers) of five-six gallons each for a total of just about 41 gallons of wine. There was a lot of "free wine" (the wine juice that just flows into the collection vat without having to be pressed). It could have been caught and vinified separately, but we mixed it all together. Our wine is a glorious deep purple and is already getting clearer as the dead yeast and other particles are settling to the bottom of the carboys. We had probably fifty pounds of left over squished grapes that we bagged up and one of the vintners is going to use it in her garden; this pomace is used by some European vintners to make a low-quality distilled drink called marc or grappa. They make this drink by dumping sugar, water, and the pomace together and ferment it, almost always making a lousy drink that used to be sold to the poor in Europe who couldn't afford wine. There are some Europeans who think it is really a cool drink, but it will make a better compost than a drink, I am sure. In fact, Austrians are using ground grape pomace in humus toilets, waterless toilets with a tank of rotting pomace that digests human waste to a clean odorless state within a month. The French are investigating using pomace as a fuel. It should be called "crappa", not "grappa". We sterilized everything before and after our pressing, and then covered the 41 gallons of wine with cardboard boxes so no light gets in to impact the fermenting wine. The wine is resting comfortably in our basement. We should ultimately get about 200 bottles out of what we pressed. We decided to press the wine this weekend because the bubbling in the fermentation vats slowed down to almost nothing. That means the yeast has finished up most of its work converting the sugar in the crush to alcohol and the Brix (measure of sugar) was one third of what it was when we picked the grapes. It is now vino! Now the wine goes into its secondary fermentation in these big glass containers (I don't know why they are called "carboys"). We also added sulfite to the wine to kill any remaining bacteria and to slow down the remaining fermentation process by the yeast. The carboys are topped with an airlock that lets carbon dioxide and air out, but no air in. In the next month, we have to transfer the wine into clean carboys to get rid of the sediment at the bottom of the carboys. That will make the wine a lot clearer. This is called racking; and we do that every couple of months for the next six months. Then the wine will go into small (10 gallon) oak barrels for about six months, and then back in the carboys for another six months (the last two steps are part of the aging process). Putting the wine in oak barrels gives the wine a little oak flavor and fine tunes the taste of the wine. We are going to have to experiment about how long to keep it in the barrels. Oak barrels come from Wisconsin and Arkansas, and the best ones come from France (where they are Christened by brie eating French priests and aged in French whorehouses for a decade before they are sold for more money than your best dining room table). We will use the American oak barrels. About a year from now, we will bottle the wine. We could wait up to two years before bottling; we shall see. Cabernet sauvignon is a big red wine that deserves a lot of good aging before it is drunk. Drinking it too young would be like eating cookie dough before the cookies are baked. It tastes good, but there is no comparison to baked cookies. So, all of you who have written back and demanded a bottle of this hooch will have to wait until my 56th birthday party in January 2008. I will pass out wine in exchange for wonderful gifts! You will have to let it age in the bottle for a while too; good red wine can go on aging for years and years, and just gets better and better. Some of the folks who got my first e-mail about this sent along stories of their grandfathers or fathers making wine years ago. If you have any stories or know someone who has a story like that, send them my e-mail address. I think I am going to collect some stories and recipes and put them together in an article or a little book that I am going to call "Tales From the Purple Feet Society-Wine making At Home in America". I am expanding the list of recipients on this e-mail for that purpose. This has been a lot of fun and not a lot of work, really. I should have been doing this years ago. I have been drinking (good) wine for about twenty years now, having shared many trips to the Napa, Sonoma and Russian River Valley wine country in California with our good friends, Harold and Karen Miskel. We toured some Oregon wineries with our buddy Paul Elias (who lives with Carol surrounded by vineyards in McMinnville, Oregon). And, I have just begun to hit Washington state wineries in the last five years. So much wine, so little time. I have organized a Wine Tasting Club in our neighborhood, and that is going great-so many people love wine today. If I get to retire in 8 to 10 years, God-willing, I should know something about making wine by then, and I will be ready for the third phase of my life and maybe a second career. Below is the first message I sent out for those just getting this story for the first time. Sorry if you think I am obsessed, but I am having fun with this and it is amazing how many people are winemakers at home. The Boeing Wine Club, we are told, just bought 500,000 pounds of grapes from a Washington state vineyard for their winemaking this fall! Next year, we will have to kick up production to 2000 pounds-maybe 500 bottles. Drink lots of good red (or white) wine this Thanksgiving and Christmas (or anytime really) and don't buy the cheap stuff! Go out and get a bottle of J. Lohr Winery cabernet sauvignon (Seven Oaks Estates Paso Robles) and have it with some good cheese or spaghetti with marinara sauce. Molto Buono! It is my house wine. And, bless you all for listening to me and being so good to me.....Mike

Wednesday, August 16, 2006

Gallon of gas $3: Trade car for a house today?

Some facts: 200,000 barrels of Alaskan crude lost each day because of BP.Before the US invasion of Iraq the price of a barrel of oil was $20. Gallon of gas was under $1.50. Iraq quit producing over a million barrels of oil a day when the war started, at the same time the demand for oil increased. Hurricanes Katrina and Rita knocked out oil wells and refineries in the Gulf of Mexico. Many people are driving less but getting used to $3 a gallon or more. The next coming thing....gas shortage with long lines at the pumps to get us all to being thankful for gas at any price. Good news.....BP and the other oil companies all reported record profits. Next time you see all the long faces at the gas pumps you will know why!!! A personal life note: My father, when he married my mother, had a nice car and traded it for a house that my uncle owned. We walked everywhere. I grew up in Iron Mountain, Michigan. We could walk to trout streams, our hunting camp and downtown, which was a mile away. I don't live in that world anymore and most of us don't and have to depend on our car for work and fishing and hunting (for me) is not just a walk out the back door for a mile. Gas back in the '40s was only 15-cents a gallon. My father thought that was too much even then! A lot of people thought he was a little crazy for walking everywhere including 2 miles each way to the Ford Plant to work. They also ridiculed him because he liked to run 20 miles whenever he had the time. What stands out the most is that I doubt if I could trade my car for a house in today's world!! I know it is not the same money today but get this.... My Dad made $45 a week at his job. Last time I filled my truck it cost me $88!! Cheers, Joe

Saturday, July 01, 2006

Gas prices then and now, but there's still hope

Please read and don't give up. Someday gas will be a thing of the past. If you have a car that gets 20 miles to the gallon, you drive 30,000 miles a year. At $3.00 a gallon you will have spend $4,500 a year! In 1971 that same gas at $.25 a gallon would have cost you $375.00. Don't be fooled when the BIG BOYS tell you that in today's money the price is still the same. If they keep saying it enough they will make you believe it while they wallow in ridiculous profits. Joe

Wednesday, June 07, 2006

Who killed electric cars?

In case you still have not seen "An Inconvenient Truth" as of yet, I recommend you do so. We all can help. More on the movie... Notice the old TV commercial in it, "9 out of 10 doctors smoke Camels!" Funny how a lot of us got sucked into that. My mother died at 54, sister at 47. Both non-filter chain-smokers. It is still going on today with the scientists that are being paid to say that there is no such thing as global warming. When the snow finally is all gone from Mt. Kilimanjaro will they still say that? One scientist called global warming a hoax. Clip of Ronnie Reagan saying trees pollute and George Bush senior saying we will have no jobs but be surrounded by owls. There is soon to be another documentary out called "Who Killed Electric Cars"? In 1996 there were thousands on the road in California and then the companies quit making them? Why? Was it big oil? GM? There are still a hundred trillion barrels of oil in the ground, untapped. Do you think the big boys will ever let that profit go away? To do list. Every little bit helps. 1.Change a light 2.Drive less 3.Recycle more 4.Check your tires 5.Use less hot water (take a shower once a week like I do) Ha-ha! 6.Avoid products with a lot of packaging 7.Adjust your thermostat(get a blanket if cold, if hot sit in the nude) 8.Plant a tree 9. Be part of the solution not the problem That is my lecture..See Al Gore tell more. Joe

Sunday, June 04, 2006

An Inconvenient Truth is a "must see" movie

This is a very compelling movie with the caveat that, if you don't like Al Gore this'll be a little challenging, but I encourage you to overcome this feeling though, and I do sincerely hope that you'll make a point to watch it as soon as possible. EVERY unbiased scientific data is pointing to the same direction... The large fraction of the US mass media that question the findings have ties with the current government, the Oil industry (sorry, repetition)or GM. It IS a scary movie and even though our brains cannot completely fathom the consequences that are implied here and some consequences that are suggested might not come to pass, it is no reason to close our eyes and ears while humming some primal sounds in order not to be distracted from our current state of denial. I thought I had a pretty good knowledge on the subject, but I didn't realize how much more serious it has become in such a SHORT time. Another point showing that everything is connected, Jacques Cousteau before his death said that the major issue for the future of human race will be overpopulation. It took 1 million some years to see 2,000,000,000 people living on earth at the same time and only ONE life time to increase that number by 6,000,000,000 more. Almost everywhere else in the world (the US Government - many states and cities in the US are doing something - and Australia are the only 2 major exceptions among the richest nations), everybody, even governments, are talking in urgent terms about global climate changes and its dire consequences, putting new policies in place and watching people starting to modify their old habits. Hopefully it'll come to our country too and not too soon. Earth is big but its atmosphere is VERY thin and fragile and human activities ARE impacting significantly the composition of this thin lifesaving layer. Imagine your children and your children's children asking in 20, 30 or 50 years: What have they done while we still had a chance? Joe

Friday, May 26, 2006

American Idol Season Finale

American Idol...what a great show!!And to think there were more votes cast for the final two, Katherine and Taylor, 63 million. More than any elected President of the United States has ever received!(don't we know there is a war going on?) yes we do but what the hell can we do about now?. One of the reasons most of us enjoyed Idol so, is because it is an escape from the horror of war, to what America really is like, and how any one can make it in life in this country without being suppressed. With all my heart, I hope America did the right thing for the Iraqi people and not to many more Americans and Iraqi innocents die for the cause.Time will tell. American Idol had sentimentality and there has always been a good feeling when the majority of people you know watched the same thing you did. Kind of like when Elvis, The Beatles, Doors, Rolling Stones and so forth performed on "The Ed Sullivan Show". A person couldn't wait until the next day to talk with friends and give opinions, just like I'm doing now. Remember when just about everyone knew all the hit songs on the radio? You could drive around town with the convertible top down and the radio turned up and listen with almost a stereo affect when the guy next to you had the same song on. Of course there were only a couple of big top forty stations in each town. Idol had everything last night. Fun, entertainment and some fine performances. Carrie Underwood and Clay Aikmen are truly professionals and showed it last night. They have sold a lot of records. I loved the duets that were performed and some brought some sentimental tears to my eyes. Parris Bennett and Al Jarreau were wonderful. Hard to believe Parris has such a fine voice for being a teen.They were all excellent. Chris Daughtry and Live, ( Chris will be a star),Elliot Yamen and Blige (Elliot is so good, but Blige seemed to not know the song she sang.? Taylor and Toni Braxton where very good! The Burt Bacharach segment was heart warming. Give credit to Dionne Warwick doing some of the songs she recorded over 45 years ago.Her songs brought back many memories for me of make up break up times with girls.(maybe you to if you were around then?) The Katherine McPhee duet with Meatloaf was very, very good and maybe the best. You can't help falling in love with Katherine when watching her perform. It is almost as if you wish you could reach the TV screen and touch her. She will not only be a famous singer but an actress, too.! If Elvis were alive today and was Katharine's age, I could see them as a perfect couple. I like how the families are brought into American Idol. Shows where these performers came from. It may sound corny but if you watch all the episodes one almost feels as if you know them all. Liberace was a master at using the screen to almost reach out into your living room and bring you on stage with him. Women were in love with him, (a lot of men too). Showman ship always works and that is why Taylor Hicks won. He never let the putting down by Simon affect him one bit. He went on and yes... I did like his shinny fancy suits.(thank you, Elvis) Speaking of showmanship....hard to beat Prince. He knows how to put it together and has so much talent. When the song "Raspberry Beret" came out in 85, I was working a t KJR at the time. The program director"Tom Watson" a very nice man for some reason refused to play it! Gary Lockwood, myself and others could not believe it and begged him to no avail. I liked the "Broke-note Cowboy" segment. Those three guys weren't too bad.(kind of cute, too) The only low point to the show was showing the poor sport women swearing and Ryan Seacrest making references to her being a hooker. Could have done with out that. A lot of young kids (the majority) are watching that stuff including my grand-girls.(Does any one remember when comedian Jackie Mason was on Ed Sullivan and ED thought Jackie gave him the finger as he walked off stage? He was never invited back again and was black-balled from most of the TV networks. Jackie to this day says he never did it and I believe him. Well lets hope they have another good group of singers next year on Idol. A lot of nay sayers thought it would be a one season wonder!! (see the movie "That Thing You Do" with Tom Hanks. It captures the sixty's perfectly. Rock on Brothers and Sisters, Joe

Wednesday, May 24, 2006

American Idol Final

Just some thoughts on American Idol... the talent was great this year and at times it looked like at least 7 or 8 had a chance to go all the way to the end. I liked Taylor and Katherine from the very beginning and I think Taylor will win it. Katherine has the better voice, but too bad she couldn't have stuck with the blues more. Nice to see a guy with gray hair not be afraid to go the way he was. He could have easily dyed it, but wouldn't have stood out from the others. I do wish he would have done Joe Cocker's version of "I Get by With a little help from my friends" or "High Time She Went." I find it a bit odd to think that television is making stars of talent that would have more than likely, never been heard. I'm glad they are doing it. Radio stations for the most part, are not. They just to want play something that has been approved by some focus group and the conglomerates have made everything so homogenized, that I don't even listen much any more. now that I have satelite radio. When I got in radio broadcasting,1966,the jock could still pick a few songs that he thought could make it. One of my pick hits of the week was "Oh Kitty" by a guy named Cat Stevens. In Grand Rapids the jocks would come in early for their radio shows and pick through boxes of oldies they thought listeners would like. Those were the creative days. Before radio, when I was in a couple of rock bands, we could stop at the radio stations, let the on-air guy listen to the records we recorded and he could decide to play it if he wanted. When I lived in Michigan and had the band "Joey Gee and the Bluetones" I was more or less my own promoter. I sent out letters with the 45s to stations that I knew of. WLS, Chicago, Dick Biondi, read my letter on the air and played the song we recorded. It only sold a few thousand copies, but it was still fun. Later on when I decided to attend broadcast school in Milwaukee I formed another band called "Joey Gee and the Come-ons." We got in a Battle of the Bands and came in sixth. No one offered us a contract and I then realized how tough it was to make it when we competed with over six hundred bands. Being a country bumpkin from the U.P., eh, where there were only a handful of bands made me understand that it might be a hard way to make a tough living. Who do you think will win tonight - Taylor Hicks or Katherine McPhee? Joe

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

Manual labor or labor by Manuel?

Maybe I was wrong saying the illegals are taking jobs Americans don't want. Thinking back there were twice and many kids coming into the world when I was born in the mid forties. We had seven kids in our family and you would get nothing, unless you worked for it. Even the "Leave it to Beaver" families made the kids work in some way. We used to sell greeting cards, flower seeds or whatever, door to door just to get enough money to buy that new bike or cap gun. One of our rituals was to pick strawberries, raspberries, pine cones, potatoes and we were paid by the bushel or pound. How many young people do you know do that today? I remember clearly when I was in 7Th grade and wanted to go out for football but didn't have the money for the ten dollar insurance we all had to have, one of the teachers heard about it somehow, and asked me to rake leaves for the money and I was excited to do it. Later years I set bowling pins (job doesn't exist any more). In high school we took shop (woodworking) and I learned so much from it. Sometimes the counselors might ask why I wanted to take it every year thinking that maybe it was just an easy subject, but I really liked it. Later in life and even to this day I use knowledge from wood shop when building houses, and so forth. Not everyone can work in the computer connected industry. Some have to do physical work, also. When I was doing my radio work, which I enjoyed, I also enjoyed and sometimes even more so, getting out there and framing a house, hanging doors and cabinets, building decks. When one is done for the day, you at least can stand back and see what you accomplished. Very rewarding. My son Joey and daughter Gina framed homes with me in High School and College and loved it. I know it is hard if you have kids and you are doing fairly well, not to just give them things without working for it. I'm guilty of that even as a grandparent but whenever I think of something for them to do to make a little money I'll ask them. They have picked raspberries with Kathy and me. When Kathy and I lived in Portland we would pick berries for extra money which we needed at the time. Never for a minute felt too good to do it. We learned a lot, also from the folks that had to do it 8 to 14 hours a day. My point to all this and I don't mean to lecture or tell you what to do, but feel you should make your children work for at least some money. I know most of us didn't want that for our kids and we would rather they play sports, and study in school instead. They can do all of that but maybe not at the extent some of us did when we were kids. Pick some strawberries for money this spring. Raspberries, potatoes later on and see what it feels like. When you get older you never regret any hard worked you did as a kid. A lot of children were over worked and that is not good either. I just think it is good to walk in someone else’s shoes for a while and make us all more understanding. Sometimes even I forget… Cheers, Joe

Saturday, April 01, 2006

Movie Preview and Review: Akeelah and the Bee

Akeelah and the Bee. You guessed it ... a spelling bee. Heartfelt story ofan eleven-year-old girl who knows how to spell and lives in the rough part of south Los Angeles. Makes one realize more of what it is like to be in a school with busted lockers, doors broken off bathrooms, and some tough characters to deal with. It would be so easy to fall into the wrong crowd. What I love about the movie is that it shows the love of these kids for each other of all races and that just maybe, learning in school is much more important than getting into a gang or rebelling like we all did as kids. Most of the time it is to please our friends. One scene that related to me a lot, since I grew up very poor with five brothers and a sister, was the party for the spelling bee finalists. When I was in third grade I was invited to a birthday party of one of my girl classmates. Had my mother buy and wrap me a present. When I got to the house (very big and nice) I felt not worthy and turned around and went back home. There is a scene very similar to that in the show. I'm not saying it was the best acting, but it didn't make any difference. It will make you feel good. Akeelah played by Keke Palmer was sweet and very likable. Angela Bassett was good, too. I especially liked the acting part of Laurence Fishburne as a very dedicated teacher and a person you would love to know. We need more of these positive movies for our young people. To tell you the truth, I would rather see a spelling bee much more than any sport that I can think of. Take care, Joe

Tuesday, March 28, 2006

Bait

My usual springtime, getting-ready-for-opening-day-of-trout fishing ritual consists of untangling all the fishing poles and lines from the year before. I always try to enlist my wife Kathy or a neighbor lady, whoever is handy, to hold the other end of the line and keep it tight so I can reel it back in easier. Yesterday, I coaxed my wife and the neighbor lady into holding the ends of the lines, so I could do just that. We now live in a 55 and older community called Trilogy. An elderly man (probably younger than me) stopped and stared for a few seconds. With sort of a lecherous smile on his face, he said, "I don't know what you're using for bait, son ... but I'll take a dozen!"

Saturday, March 25, 2006

UW Washington Huskies versus UConn

Well here we go again. You probably received, awhile back, my rant and rave on the Seahawks’ Super Bowl robbery and had put the game pretty much behind me. Every now and then something on ESPN will pop up and give mention of the poor jobs the refs did and that Seattle really had a much better team. It didn'thelp the other day when I heard that Condi Rice was at the game and is from Detroit! Hmm… I wonder? After that game I had decided to not put my faith in our local sports teams, more the attitude if they win they win. That's great and not to get caught up in the thrill of winning, say the Super Bowl or get into the final four of the NCAA basketball tournament. All this sports stuff goes back to my living in small towns in Michigan's Upper Peninsula where you live and breathe sports. More like a religion. If you read other personal stories on my blog http://FivePoundTrout.blogspot.com you will know what I mean. When we moved to the Pacific Northwest in ’71, we moved here for the great outdoors, mountains, hiking, fishing, hunting, clam-digging, swimming in the ocean and so forth. I stopped paying much attention to sports until the Washington football Huskies went to the Rose Bowl in ‘78 and the Super Sonics won the NBA title in ‘79. Also let's not forget about the Kirkland Little League team winning the World Championship in baseball. The Washington Huskies continued to be great up until recent years. When Don James took the team to the Rose Bowl almost every year, the folks in California didn't take to us too kindly. How dare that pip-squeak town Seattle bring those Huskies down here almost every year in front of a huge national audience and play in our Rose Bowl in Pasadena! The schoolhad some minor violations so all the PAC ten teams voted to sanction us on the amount of top players we could recruit, take away televised games and other things. Huskies went downhill fast and are still trying to catch up in football. Then we bring in a new Washington Husky basketball coach, a great guy, Lorenzo Romar, and the basketball team catches fire. Excellent teams the last two years with fine players like Brandon Roy, a wonderful human being andthe best all around player you will ever see play. He will be in the NBA! And then we have Adam Morrison for Gonzaga, another one of the best players in thecountry. Both teams this year were really excellent and I started to watch them play. Even went to a few games and I must admit they were exciting and fun. I had fallen off the sports wagon again and I was hooked. I couldn't put the remote down whenever either of them played. After all, Gonzaga represents eastern Washington and the Huskies represent the Puget Sound region. Of course, when they played each other it was a win-win situation, but I was pulling for the Huskies, and Washington won. When Gonzaga played UCLA Thursday night in the Sweet Sixteen, it looked like the Bulldogs were running away with it and they were - leading by as much as 17 points at one time. They were on their way. I'm not clear on all the details but they were leading by a lot with just a couple minutes to go. It then turned from a basketball game into a football game. Zags were being hammered every time they touched the ball and no fouls were called! As you know, they lost in the end on a lucky shot by UCLA. Well, there goes my dream of Washington and Gonzaga in the final four. I then start to think like a drug addict or alcoholic who has fallen off the wagon and asking themselves ‘Why am I doing this?’ Then came last night. Still hope. The Huskies are playing one of the top teams in the country, UConn with lots of east coast sports media thinking they are the best team since sliced bread. I'm thinking, just you wait, the Huskies are going to surprise you and I knew it was against my better judgment to do so. Instead I came in with the attitude before the game started to just resign myself and expect them to lose. Washington was playing great and I changed my mind. If you saw the game, you know what I'm talking about. Connecticut (they are Huskies too) looked stunned and acted like cry-babies and couldn't understand why the Huskies were beating them so badly. UConn coach must have had a long talk with the refs at half-time and then came the fouls. Tell me if this makes sense: UConn goes to the line for free-throws 47 times to Washington’s 23? Washington had five players foul out of the game with five fouls (Brandon Roy, with 13 minutes left in the game, was called forhis fourth foul of the game that included a cheap personal technical foul.) He had to go to sit it out until just a few minutes were left in the game, our best player. Who knows what the score would have been, if he had stayed in? Just like the Seahawks’ game. There is no way the Huskies would be allowed to win. The game goes into overtime with almost all our players in foul trouble or already out of the game. It ended up with Washington Huskies: five players fouled out ofthe game, and two others with four. UConn: two players with four, two with three and so forth. What is wrong with that picture? I will say, just like the Seahawks, they should have won anyway. A bit of luck was not on Washington’s side either. The three-pointer with two seconds remaining in regulation by Connecticut’s Rashard Anderson was the killer. Huskies should be playing Sunday. Oh, what could have been? Well, no more sports for me unless the Sonics get in the finals or the Mariners are in the World Series. Maybe God wants the folks in the Northwest to enjoy the beauty we have here instead of glorifying human beings and their accomplishments. The good news: Razor clamming is open this weekend, most trout fishing lakes open the last Saturday in April with stream fishing is not far behind. Start getting the flies and fly rod ready! The spring turkey hunt opens the middle of April, also. Where are the referees? Referees? We don't need no stinkin’ referees...to play in the outdoors! Thank you, Treasure of Sierra Madre. I'm back on the wagon. Joe PS Always remember: You take a kid fishing. You don't go fishing with a kid!

Friday, March 24, 2006

Why the old ladies in black still pray...

When I was around 9 or 10 years old going to the Catholic church, The Immaculate Conception, in Iron Mountain, Michigan, wasn't my greatest joy. Back in the early '50s the masses were Latin and itwas hard for me to get a whole lot out it, at that age. All I knew is that my knees and legs ached and it seemed as if the service went on for hours! It probably did go an hour-and-a-half, but that's what it feels like when your are a kid. Almost intolerable in todays world. My Aunt Mary, who had no children of her own, loved to dress me up and take me to church with her. My mother had five young ones to look after andI'm sure it would have been hard for her. My dad, for some reason, and almost all my uncles, including my grandfather (who at one time wanted to be a priest and studied for it in Italy, before moving toAmerica) never went to church. A running joke was that, if any of them ever did step foot in church it would fall over! Anyway, I'm glad I went! I've always been, even at a young age, and now as an older age, curious about people and why they do the things they do. It helps me understand more why I do the things I do, even if you don't understand why I do the things I do. Confusing? The old ladies, mostly Italian, dressed almost in pure black, including black stockings to hide (I assume) varicose veins. Some of the women had small beards or whiskers, common for old Italian women and as a kid scared me a little. They always sat in the very back of the church, not for just one mass but for maybe a couple of masses and all the time in between. They sat and (kneeled when they could) holding rosaries with arthritic hands. They would bow their heads and say the prayers of the rosaries. Up until today, I always thought they were praying to get into Heaven thinking they didn't have much time left on this earth. I now believe I was wrong. Those old Italian ladies were praying for you and me. I think they saw, even in the '50s, the atrocities of the world and were praying for it to be a better place. They were most likely praying for maybe husbands or sons that were killed during the wars or some misfortune in a friend's life. I still don't go to church very often and when I do, they are still standing after I walk out. I suppose an earthquake will hit when I'm inside one someday! If that happens, be sure and take a mental note of what I said. I know there are still old ladies and old men that say the rosary and spend hours in church. God blessthem! Joe

Friday, February 24, 2006

Gross National Product performing on stage

My First Radio Job and My Band

My first radio job, after broadcast school in Milwaukee, was in Rogers City, Michigan. Nice small town on the water (nice beaches)in northern lower Michigan. The station was WHAK. I met these guys at a sock-hop I did in Petoskey who called themselves the Heathens. We actually did a half-hour live radio broadcast on Saturday mornings. Owner was a religious fanatic and didn't like the name of the band. His wife who was secretary took me aside one day and said I didn't belong in radio because I wasn't good enough. Decided to move to St.Ignace and work for WIDG(widg by the bridge)as Joe Arthur. That is where I met Kathy. Thought I had better write some of this stuff down while I still remember it. Joe a.k.a. Joey Gee and The Come Ons

Friday, February 17, 2006

Growing Up Hunting in the U.P., eh? Michigan

When my father took me hunting for the first time and let me carry a gun, here are some of the rules he went by. I started hunting at 10 years old and was never allowed to have or use a BB gun, because my Dad said all kids would do with them is kill small birds or shoot somebody's eye out. We only hunted animals that we could put on the table for food. Rule # 1: Don't point a gun at someone unless you are going to kill them! When I first heard him say that I was shocked trying to imagine: Why would he say that? Then it dawned on me. Rule # 2: Understand that a gun is always loaded even if it is not! Rule # 3: Always know the target you are shooting at! No sound shots! If you hear a sound, don't take a shot and hope some animal or bird will be found dead. You might be in for an unwanted surprise. Since we grew up poorer than poor, we never took practice shots or a shot at a partridge, deer or whatever, unless we had a real good chance of making a kill. Hunting for our family was more for the food and being out in the wilderness, but it was sport,too. If I came home with shots fired and no bird or animal I was yelled at! Made me learn to be a careful and accurate hunter. When I was twelve my father bought me my first gun, a 22, for my birthday. That small game hunting season (we could hunt from our backyard) he told me to go up in the hills to see if I could get a rabbit or grouse. I was on an old dirt road and the local Iron Mountain police were in a patrol car (don't know why they were way up there) stopped me and took my gun away! I told them I was hunting, but they didn't believe me. When I got home and told my Dad about it, he grabbed my hand and we headed for the police station. Don't remember his words, but my father was mad as hell when he confronted the chief of police (Rayhoy). He explained what happened and how the patrol officer more or less called me a liar and took my gun. The chief agreed with my father, apologized to me and gave the gun back. The reason I remember the chief's name was because he had done such nice things for all us kids when I was growing up. On Friday nights, he would invite us to watch movies at the hall and serve us spaghetti dinner. Other times all us kids would make model airplanes and so forth. We admired the police. I'm sure you are all sick of the Dick Cheney jokes, but I do have some questions on his hunting. He was using a 28-gauge (the smallest next to a 410) and I don't understand how he could put over a hundred pellets in a person at 30 yards when I doubt if you could even kill a quail at that distance. Doesn't gel with me. Of course, most folks wonder whey he took five days to tell Fox News what happened. Why was it just Fox News and not all the networks? Was he afraid he might be asked the wrong questions or does he have something to hide? Don't blame the news media for something you did. Questions are supposed to be asked of you when you're Vice President of the United States! More and more stories are coming out about his hunting excursions. In Wyoming, when hunting with his friends, they would have bets on who would kill the first antelope (he really needed the meat) and one time he took a long out-of-range shot, ended up wounding the animal and the hunting party followed it most of the day. Another time they (whoever he was hunting with) had a contest to see who could get the most pheasants (this was on private land in North Dakota) Dick Cheney won by killing 75! How many of those did he eat? I knew a guy that went hunting with Dick Cheney and all he ended up with at the end of the day was a bloody t-shirt with BB holes in it! (Joke) Again....let's make getting a hunting license (I guess Dick didn't have one) for a Vice President as hard as it is for older folks to get medicare. Good Night and Good Hunting, Joe

Sunday, February 12, 2006

Proposal to Revise Hunting License Regulations

Due to the very unfortunate incident involving Vice President Dick Cheney in the hunting accident where he shot a man, I think we should all propose and help pass into law, and make it just as hard for a Vice President to get a hunting license as it is for retired folks to get Medicare. Ask yourself this: Do you feel safer today than you did six years ago when you are out on the hunting range where Dick Cheney could be carrying a gun? Enough said. Joe

Wednesday, February 08, 2006

Why We Fight -- documentary debuts

Just came from the documentary, coming out this week, "Why We Fight". Very factual and not a Michael Moore-type show. It will make you sick,(at least it should) after you see it. Not because of dead bodies of innocent adults and children in Iraq, and that is bad enough, but to think of how we condone it. This is not an anti-republican or anti-war movie but it will explain, in great detail of what has gone on in our country for a long time and what is going on today. Very disturbing. I'm surprised the government hasn't suppressed it(maybe they will) from going to all theaters around America! Just a few factual thinmgs: First as good of a President Harry Truman was supposed to be, he wanted the A-bombs dropped on Japan before they had a chance to surrender. The United states had to show the rest of the world how powerful we were and don't mess with us. To do that we killed hundreds of thousands innocent Japanese men, women and children. General Eisenhower did not want that, and tried to prevent it to no avail. When Dwight D. Eisenhower was president he warned of a military build-up. On his final speech before he left office he was very concerned if we ever get a president who hasn't fought in a war!! We all know George W.Bush didn't. When you see how our congressmen and senators, Democrat and Republicans, all defend their own states because of the big military contracts awarded to each and how they manipulate things to get those contracts you will know what I mean. The motion picture points out how we are not allowed to see on television, flag-draped coffins, dead American soldiers, and very seldom actual fighting, you will realize why. The Vietnam War might still be going on today, had TV not showed military actions, wounded soldiers and innocent civilian deaths of families. I very seldom get any response from any of you about this kind of stuff. I understand we all have families to support, house and car payments and so on to take time to worry about wars. Or maybe you have all given up? I worked in radio during the time of the Vietnam war and remember the protesters that stood up against it. They should not have blamed the soldiers, mostly poor kids from small towns, though. They were told the war was right!! I too, maybe like you now, had a wife and two small children to support and never participated in any. I did have the air waves, however, to get my point across, often. We on-air DJs could actually play anti-war songs and make comments without getting in trouble. In a free country you are supposed to be able to do that! With all the conservative conglomerates owning most of the radio stations today, you will never hear Donovan's 'Universal Soldier', Barry McGuire's 'Eve of Destruction', Edwin Stars' 'War(what's it good for)', 'Blowin in the Wind', 'Where Have all the Flowers Gone?', 'Four Dead in Ohio' and many more. Satellite radio will put them all out of business in a few years anyway. The only pro-war song I remember playing was the late Staff Sergeamt Barry Sadler's 'Ballad of the Green Berets'. My brother Gene was in the Green Berets in Vietnam. He was shot several times in the back by the Viet Cong and left for dead. He ended up with a permanent disability and roams the country. I haven't seen him in years and hope he is OK. I don't want to carry this out too long so just see the movie if it comes to a theater near you. I'm no movie critic but this should be a must see. The American Empire goes on forever. Take care. Joe

Seahawks' Welcome Home Celebration

I went down to the "Welcome back Seahawks celebration" at the football stadium in Seattle yesterday and here is what I observed. First of all, it was a beautiful sunny day and inspite of the rain we get (it is truly not as bad as out of townees think) I thought of how lucky we are to live in such a beautiful city with mountains, water, hunting and fishing in our backyards. I hear that in Pittsburgh (this is not sour grapes) that if a person puts too much oil on their skin the soot from the steel factories will stick to it. Sometimes it is so thick and dark that the street lights come on automatically at noon. I'm sure there are good things about living in Pittsburgh, too, but I just can't think of anything!! When fans were greeted at the gate the ushers were very kind and handed out free 12Th Man flags and Seahawks beads to everyone. They all wore legitimate natural smiles of optimism on their faces. Most fans, like myself, had some kind of shirt or hat just to show you were a Seahawk fan. Many families showed up all dressed up and taken out of school for the afternoon's celebration. We all watched the Seahawks' jet fly over Qwest Field and some fans swore they could see Shawn Alexander waving to us as the chanting of "refs suck, refs suck..." filled the stadium. We all knew we had at least a half hour before the players would be at the stadium after that. I think what struck me the most was the feeling I got from a big percent of the fans that they lived and breathed the Seahawks and the winning and being part of something was very important in their lives. In many cases the only thing in their lives! I saw tears well up in the eyes of many when the players, all of them, walked along the stadium giving high-fives and shaking fans' hands and signing autographs. We all know that no matter, if you are rich or poor or in between, we all have days of heaven and hell. All in all it was a good thing for the fans and they all were smiling and buying Seahawks hats and T-shirts (including myself) and really do believe we will make it again next year. Some Superbowl facts: Seahawks lost 161 yards on penalties (70) and flags wiped out (91). By half-time alone we trailed 7-3 and had 73 hard-earned yards and a touch-down eliminated. In the game, Seattle had almost 400 total yards and would have had 560 total yards and won the football game, if it wasn't for the refs. Must admit, we still should have won even if the whole world was against us. As much as I like Jerome Bettis, I felt the game was more about him getting his ring. Kind of like when most of the country wanted John Elway to get his Super Bowl ring before his career ended. At least he got his legitimately! Last night David Letterman asked quarterback of the Steelers Ben Roethlisberger if he thought he made the touchdown. Ben said "no" and even told his coaches that. Life goes on and fish are always biting (not true) but, fishing will set your mind free. Cheers, Joe

Monday, February 06, 2006

Did Las Vegas Odds-Makers Influence Outcome of Super Bowl XL?

Just realized why the refs in the Super Bowl had all the calls go against the Seattle Seahawks. It was LasVegas! Here is my take: The Steelers were favored by 4 points to win the game. On Saturday the bets started pouring in with (from what I hear) 75 percent going towards the Seahawks winning! If the Seahawks would have won, the casino owners would have lost millions. There was no way the Seahawks were going to win! How hard would it be for someone to slip a hundred thousand in cash under a ref's door in the middle of the night? He would be too afraid to let Seattle win. Just my opinion. After all, if two presidential elections can be stolen, how hard would it be to steal a little ol' Super Bowl?

Referees and Steelers 21, Seahawks 10

Super Bowl Final Score: Referees and Steelers 21, Seattle Seahawks 10

Seahawks' Super Bowl Victory Taken Away by Refs

Well, I don't want to sound like a sore loser, but I really believe the refs took the Super Bowl away from the Seattle Seahawks. Seattle did have their share of mistakes and could have been up 24-0 at half-time had everything gone right. Refs took at least a couple of our touchdowns away and gave them at least one. It is the worst officiating game I have ever seen in my life time!!! I now really believe there is an east coast bias towards the northwest. I used to hear that a lotwhen we first moved out this way from Michigan in 1971, but thought it was just folks'imagination. Hate to tell them, but we really do have paved streets out here, we won't be killed by a grizzly bear and Seattle is not in Canada!! (perhaps we should be) People from lower Michigan used to, (and maybe still do) think those same things about the U.P. (Say ya to da U.P. too,eh!! When the Seahawks first were formed, I still remember watching the Kingdome being built and then blown up a few years ago(starting to feel old!!)and buying season tickets, nice seats for $7.50. It was exciting! When the new football field was built I had season tickets for the first two years. Living in the Upper Peninsula, near Greenbay where one could never get a ticket unless someone gave you one, I thought I was real lucky out this way. After a while I found out it wasn't much fun losing and getting your hopes up for the Seahawks but this year was different. I still only watched the games if I didn't have something else going on the weekends (like fishing, hunting or going to the ocean)or having dinner with friends,etc.) I watched the playoffs and it was fun, but I let my heart get in the way when it came to the Superbowl!! I truly thought we would win big, and if we lost it would have been OK, if the better team would have won! A lot of these feelings go back to my high school days,(John Lavoto and Ken Anderson will remember)1960-61 Norway High School, and the Upper Peninsula of Michigan where sports is more like a religion and we used to live and breathe them. We had excellent athletes at Norway, first time in many years, and John Lavoto was a superior running back that senior year of high school. We were predicted to go undefeated that year, we had such good players. We started out great and won all our games until we played Iron Mountain, whom we were predicted to beat easily. Game day,since we thought it would be an easy win, most of us decided to get up early that Saturday morning,(4 a.m. or so)and go partridge hunting, since it was the first day of bird season and we wouldn't dare miss it. I went with Ron DeBernardi and I think,(John, correct me, if I'm wrong) and most of the team went, also. We were all pretty tired. Before we knew it we were down 13 nothing at halftime. I can still hear Gene Melchori telling us, along with our head coach Allen Ronberg, that if we lose we will remember this game for the rest of our lives. They were right. We lost 13-6 and do remember it as if it were yesterday. It was a long and sad bus ride home. The same feeling came over me yesterday, but in away it was worse, because I felt the game was taken away,(not totally)by the refs. Can't imagine being a player, but I would be rich!!! Quite a few years later when my brother Bob Giannunzio won a couple of state championships as head coach of Norway High School,(I never got to see any of the games and get that enjoyment of winning.) Sorry I missed em. I, however, do remember him telling me how Norway never made the playoffs after being undefeated, because of the crazy point system they had at that time, before that. (By the way Pete Focasoto who played on my brother's championship teams lives in Arlington,Washington, a few miles from me and I see him often. Going back to 1961, Norway also had a great basketball team! I wasn't on it, but John Lavoto was. We lost the U.P. Championship in triple-overtime. Most of the entire first team had fouled out. I remember a lot of bad calls in that game,too!! That Monday returning to school the students were so depressed because of the loss, that the superintendent canceled all classes for the day, and we all sat in the assembly hall and the teachers and coaches tried to cheer us up. There was a lot of crying and yes, there is crying in basketball. It was like a funeral in there, and I can still feel it, as I write these words today. As life goes on, I still remember all those things along with the good things too of friends, sports or not of high school in Norway, Michigan. What I feel grateful for most, is the fact that I learned to hunt, fish and do things in the outdoors from growing up in Michigan. My father and Uncle Romeo would always say,
no mater what happens out there in that great big world, you will always have the great outdoors to fill your enjoyment.
It is true. So today, I will go out and see if I can catch another big(any size, it doesn't matter) trout or two for supper. While I'm out there, I'm sure the memories of the Seahawks loss will enter my mind, but a hard tug on the line will make me forget quickly. After I land a fish or two and the the bite is off for a while, I will reminisce about the high school days of Norway and sometimes wish that last basket that swirled the hoop just before time expired would have gone in!!! The Seattle Seahawks are having a welcome back from the Superbowl get together at the football stadium tomorrow at 2 pm. I will put down my fishing pole and be there tomorrow!! I need closure. Cheers, Joe

Sunday, February 05, 2006

Five Pound Trout

Hello, fishers! (politically correct term) Last summer my four-year-old granddaughter, Ruby, caught a four-pound rainbow trout at Green Lake, in Seattle. Much bigger than any trout I had ever caught before. Iwas kind of jealous. I had to go and out-do her this winter at Beaver Lake, a few miles from the house. Sparkle Rainbow Power Bait was the trick with slip sinker, 3 feet of 4-lb test leader! (scary) Only two bites in five hours of fishing, but worth it. Notice how bright the stripe is on the native rainbow. More like a steelhead. I was shaking when I had to net it by myself and feared if I lost it no one would believe me on the size. Size does mater! May your fish all be big ones! To see the BIG ONE that didn't get away, look at the Photo in my Complete Profile.

Super Bowl XL Seahawks vs Steelers

Submit your Seahawks versus Steelers Super Bowl prediction! Let's see who comes the closest. You win...absolutely nothing. :) My prediction? Seahawks 34 Steelers 17

Wisdom of Chief Dan George

I was lucky enough to shake hands with Chief Dan George back in the late seventies and observe him at a pow-wow in Seattle. It was almost a feeling of seeing the Pope. He was so sincere and at peace with himself. He died in 1981. I didn't have grandchildren then, but after picking up his book and reading it again, I again realize how much wisdom he had. Wish he could have lived forever and in a way he has. You might remember him from the movie LITTLE BIG MAN and others. He lived in Vancouver, BC, Canada. I will pass some of his thoughts your way every so often. Hope you like them and can instill some of these thoughts to your children and grandchildren. From Chief Dan George: My Heart Soars
The wisdom and eloquence of my father, I pass on to my children, so they too acquired faith, courage, generosity, understaning, and knowledge in the proper way of living. Such are the memories of yesterday! Today, harmony still lives in nature, though we have less wilderness, less variety of creatures. Fewer people know the cougar's den in the hills, nor have their eyes followed the eagle's swoop, as he writes endless circles into the warm air. The wild beauty of the coastline and the taste of sea fog remains hidden behind the windows of passing cars. When the last bear's skin has been taken and the last ram's head has been mounted and fitted with glass eyes, we may find in them the reflection of today's memories. Take care, or soon our ears will strain in vain to hear the creator's song. The young and the old are closest to life. They love every minute dearly. If the very old will remember, the very young will listen.

Oil Profits

It has come to my attention and I'm sure you have seen it on the news the last few days, on the huge profits the oil companies are making. Like Exxon with 34.13 billion in profit last year. They would have made 6 billion more if car drivers wouldn't have cut down some on their driving because of the high price of gas and old folks on fixed incomes wouldn't have turned down their oil heat to near freezing. How selfish those old people are! To make up for it, I suggest you bring a donation box to your local gas station, and each time you get gasoline you put an extra dollar in the box to make up for the lesser profit! Would you want the big oil executives to miss out on one of the vacations to Tahiti? How dare you! As far as you older folks go...if you have drug prescriptions you can hardly afford, let alone your big, oil heating bill, go without them or split the pills in small pieces. There are plenty of plants out in the forests that I'm sure you could make your own remedies from! What did the native Americans do before we got here? Please do not blame your service station owners or home oil distributors. They have it tougher than we do. How would you like to be confronted every day on the price of fuel?

Saturday, February 04, 2006

Privacy Today

Don't give up your privacy rights so easily! Spy research companies like Cellular Telecommunications Internet,where Steve Largent is president and CEO, aremaking huge profits by getting your medical records, credit records, phone records and more. They are paid big bucks for this information! This is the United States of America and don'tbelieve them when they say it is being done for the good of us all and it fights terrorism. We live in a free country and you are not unpatriotic, if you don't want to be spied on. Let's fight this before it is too late and more of our freedom is taken away. Check out this Web site: PRIVACYTODAY.COM A real eye opener!