It’s a Bad Sign

By Jim Hagarty
1995

I am not prone to delivering obscene gestures to my fellow human travellers on this planet, even though their increasingly aggravating ways in these lean and mean ’90s would, on any given day, provoke a saint into a fit of cussing. I do not normally “thumb” my nose at anyone, though I cannot lie, I have done it. That little indiscretion, when I’ve given into it, has on occasion been followed by an attempt by the recipient of my gesture to “fist” my nose in repayment. I have never given anyone the Mediterrean signal whereby the back of the fingers on one hand are placed under the chin and flipped forward quickly, an ultimate signal of contempt and disgust. Nor have I ever chopped the edge of my hand into the crook of my arm or jabbed a clenched fist quickly into the air. That one means business and I’ve just never felt that prepared to face the possible free-for-all that could develop out of its use.

So that leaves one little gesture – easy to perform and impossible to mistake – involving the middle finger extended upwards on its own while the other four are curled tightly to the hand. Not too classy, I’ll admit, but as effective as an exclamation mark at the end of a sentence. It says it all. And I think it was Pierre Trudeau who said it best, through the window of a train he was riding to some protesters along the way.

It says, “You stink, take a hike, leave me alone, you’re full of it, you’re a jerk.”

And even though the use of such a gesture might betray a obvious absence of charm-school training, if it’s good enough for a prime minister, perhaps I can be forgiven the occasional use of it myself.

The thing I have to learn, I can see now, is not so much whether to use it but when. The difference between a prime minister and a lowly journalist in a small Perth County city, it seems, is that when the former uses it, it can help him win his next election. The prize for me, when I use it, is somewhat smaller.

All that to tell you this:

One day recently, I was putt-putting along Highway 8 heading from Mitchell to Stratford, when some brave clown with a foot that weighs more than his brain pulled out to pass the line of cars heading my way. All of a sudden, an ugly two-ton, hunk of steel, plastic, rubber, glass and rust was hurtling my way like a puck off Brett Hull’s stick, heading for Patrick Roy’s head. To say the least, this was distressing.

Cowboy Bob there, or whatever his name was, managed to squeak back into line before shearing my little car off at the oil pan, and such was my feeling of relief and anger that my left hand automatically came off my steering wheel and formed itself into the famous exclamation mark so that he could see just how madly I was falling in love with him.

Now here’s where a good plan often goes bad. My timing initiating my gesture was perfect and I have a good feeling the daredevil in my midst caught my drift. However, like a performer who doesn’t know when to get off the stage, I held onto my punctuation a little too long. The car directly behind the one to which I had been sending my love, bore a striking similarity to the one driven by a very close relative and the person behind the wheel looked remarkably like the person I bump into at every family gathering. As our cars met, I know I was still in full salute.

This produced a tense hour or two while I imagined my family member reviewing every detail of our past relationship to search for reasons why I’d have delivered such a negative greeting. A phone call eventually established that it was someone else’s relative who was reviewing our past relationship and that was a great relief. But it was too close a call.

So I am back to muttering under my breath and giving the cat mean stares when I get home to ease the stress of modern life. I will leave the hand gestures to prime ministers who have bodyguards to deflect hostile reactions and public-relations departments to smooth the ruffled feathers.

No Nonsense Surprise

If you knock your golf ball into the rough in Costa Rica, you might want to think twice before hunting in the tall grass for it. (Actually, this was shot in a jungle, far away from a golf course.) From the camera of my son, Chris. JH

Suspended Animation

By Jim Hagarty
This photo is of a maple leaf in my backyard. It looks like it is falling, perhaps. But it is not. It got caught in a spider web on its way down to the ground. I wonder what the spider thought when he came back to his web to find that instead of a fly.

It’s Getting Rough Out There

By Jim Hagarty
1987

(Most of you don’t know any of these places. They are the little towns and villages in Perth County around the city where I live, Stratford, in Ontario, Canada, near Toronto. I was the district editor for the local city daily paper and so was tasked with keeping track of these outlying places. They used to send me their sports scores.)


So, you thought Perth County, once a heavily treed wilderness where bear, wolf and snake roamed freely, is a tamed, civilized place today where humans can wander without fear of attack by anything wilder than an overzealous farm dog? So did I.

But now I wonder.

As I scan the sports pages of the newspapers in this area detailing the activities of various ball, hockey and soccer clubs, I see some startling headlines that have made me think twice about venturing outside the city.

Did you know, for example, that Warpigs have been sighted around Newry? Or that Grizzlies, Coyotes, Cougars and Hawks roam freely in Mitchell? Who would have guessed that there could be Warriors in Willow Grove? But there are. They recently beat Munro, which doesn’t surprise me. What else would you expect warriors to do but lay beatings? Poor Munro.

If you go to Monkton, what’s to say you won’t be jumped from behind by a Wildcat? Or attacked by someone from the Mean Machine. Or dragged off by a Vulcher? In Bornholm, you stand a good chance of being bruised by a Bruiser. Why would anyone want to go to Listowel knowing there are Tigers there? And bands of Renegades?

St. Marys, it seems to me, is a particularly dangerous spot. In that town, there are Marauders, Kickers, Seahawks, Comets, Rockettes, Trappers, Sluggers, Tornadoes, Drillers, Desperadoes, Chargers, Boomers, Blizzards, Sidewinders and Stingers. Not to mention the Hustlers and the Hummers. Or the Sharks and Nighthawks.

There are Hurricanes in Harmony, Huskies in Atwood, Raiders in Dublin, Bulldogs in Britton and Spiders in New Hamburg. Shakespeare has Steelers, Slabtown has Slammers and Staffa and Cromarty have Bombers. There are Braves in Tavistock and Bandits in Stratford.

I have no plans to visit Kurtzville up in Wallace Township so long as it has Killers, the Red Army and bands of Rebels.

In Milverton, you stand a chance of being run down by the 4-Wheel Drives. In Brodhagen, the Brewers apparently make the stuff that keeps the Bornholm Boozers going and who knows what they’ll do to you when they’ve had too much?

Meanwhile, there are Red Devils in St. Marys and Blue Devils in Mitchell and just plain Devils everywhere.

All I can say is I hope the Atwood Leftovers never run into the Mitchell Munchers.
Against all this violence, there are only a few small agents of goodness. Like the Angels in New Hamburg, the Mamas in Atwood and the Goodtimers, Servants and Baby Bears in St. Marys. There are also some harmless enough birds around like the Robins, Orioles and Blue Jays. And in a pinch you might be able to count on the Generals from St. Pauls, the Kings in St. Marys or the Knights at Kinkora to help restore order.

But with the injuries that must be an inevitable part of life in such a turbulent county, it is no surprise to me that one group of St. Marys athletes call themselves the Used Parts.

A revolution seems obviously under way in the world of sports. Where once there were Cubs, now there are Grizzlies. Cardinals have been replaced by Vulchers. The Suns are gone to be replaced by Tornadoes, Hurricanes and Blizzards.

Where teams once sported proud and noble names like the Athletics and the Selects, they now go by some unusual titles. Like the Sod Squad and the Eh-Team from St. Marys. The Dirt Bags from Mitchell. And the Dirty Shirts from Stratford.

Really, now. Aren’t those names just the Ends?

(They’re from New Hamburg.)

Hello Darkness, My Old Enemy

By Jim Hagarty
2016

This is kind of embarrassing, I suppose, but at the age of 65, I am still afraid of the dark. Maybe even more than when I was a kid and was terrified by it. That is why I like the city – lots of light at night. It’s damn dark out in the country.

I am alone this weekend for the first time in a long while and even though our house is not a large one, when you’re alone, it can seem like an old castle with 200 rooms. I hear sounds, both inside and outside and wonder what’s going on. Of course, with two cats, a dog and a mouse, some of these unexplained sounds can be figured out fairly quickly.

One night, I sat straight up in bed in the middle of the night and if I had hair, it would have been on end. Someone was playing the piano upstairs but no one was home. Jesus, Mary and Joseph. Whoever was playing it, wasn’t very good. I crept upstairs; no one there. A day or two later, our cat Mario went walking across the keys in broad daylight for some strange reason. Mystery solved.

I have to be honest, my imagination conjurs up all sorts of horrors in the middle of the night. But only when I am alone. It’s always been that way.

I have no idea how I would react if something really bad ever did happen.

I hope I never have to find out.

There’s Fungus Amungus

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Nature is amazing. Especially as it is seen through the wonderful lens of photographer and blogger Al Bossence (thebayfieldbunch.com). These mushrooms were captured growing on Al’s property in the woods near Bayfield, Ontario, Canada.

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According to Soviet Experts …

By Jim Hagarty
1991

It’s been a great time lately for experts on the Soviet Union.

People such as Ima Sacha Zmardguy, a professor at the University of Toronto who has appeared on TV news programs every night now for weeks.

A month ago, following Mikhail Gorbachev’s visit to the summit meeting of the top seven industrial nations, Mr. Zmardguy analysed the significance of the event and made a prediction.

“Although Mr. Gorbachev didn’t come away from the meeting with a lot of money,” he told a TV interviewer, “he did gain promises of technical and other assistance and I believe you’ll see him strengthened as leader of his country now. He’ll be in power for a very long time.”

Two weeks later, Mr. Gorbachev was put under house arrest and deposed as president. He was replaced by his vice-president.

“It was easy to see this coming,” Mr. Zmardguy told The Journal. “All the signs were there. When Mr. Gorbachev returned from the G-7 meeting empty handed, the writing was on the wall for him. This coup has been in the making for a long time.”

But would the Soviet president ever come back to power? “Never,” proclaimed Mr. Zmardguy. “He is totally finished as a political force in the Soviet Union. He will be kept completely out of the picture now and will soon be forgotten about.”

And Russian president Boris Yeltsin?

“Mr. Yeltsin will be the prime target of the coup now and if he is not killed or exiled, he will certainly be silenced as the voice of reform he has become.”

Will the Soviet people rise up against the coup?

“No,” predicted Mr. Zmardguy. “You have to remember that this is where Communism all began and while the people might have enjoyed their little fling with democracy under Mr. Gorbachev, they can well recall the days before shortages and political turmoil took over their land. I don’t think they’ll be too unhappy about the coup.”

Boris Yeltsin climbs on an army tank and defies the coup leaders to come and get him. Tens of thousands of ordinary people gather around the Russian parliament to defend him.

“Well, Mr. Yeltsin might hold out for a while, but he and his supporters are no match for the KGB and the Red Army both of which are in full support of the coup,” said Mr. Zmardguy.

The army and secret police refuse to attack Mr. Yeltsin. The coup leaders turn and run.

“It was plain for anyone who studies these things that the coup had no chance of succeeding,” said Mr. Zmardguy. “The Soviet people are too much in love with democracy now to ever go back to the old ways.”

Mr. Gorbachev returns to power.

“Now that he is back, Mr. Gorbachev will be a more powerful leader than ever because he will not have to compromise with the hardliners,” predicted Mr. Zmardguy.

Boris Yeltsin begins bossing around Mr. Gorbachev.

“Mr. Gorbachev is plainly just a figurehead president now,” says you know who. “Mr. Yelstin is the hero of the revolution and the real power in the Soviet Union.”

Mr. Yeltsin begins bullying the other republics in the union over mutual borders and there are demonstrations in the Ukraine against him.

“Climbing on a tank and defying the coup showed Mr. Yeltsin is a smart politician but it doesn’t mean he’s a good leader,” says Mr. Zmardguy. “People will begin to turn back to Mr. Gorbachev now because they will see him as the voice of reason.

“To people who understand these things, the path ahead for the Soviet Union is very clear.”

Costa Rica Camouflage

Nature is so amazing, giving a bit of advantage to vulnerable creatures by colouring them the same as their surroundings. From the camera of my son, Chris. JH

One Big Dummy

By Jim Hagarty
Renowned Terrible Limericker

I know a dummy named Joe.
He don’t know what he don’t know.
He thinks he’s a king
Who knows everything.
He’s as smart as my big toe.