Scottish Highlands

Scottish Highlands

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Making It Up As I Go Along #496


Crunching Snow

When it comes to senses, sight gets all the glory. 

You’ve got to see this!

Look at that!

This is the most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen.

There’s just nothing else that comes close when using sense descriptors. 

That sounds ok.

This tastes funny.

Don’t touch that!

But really, when you think about it, sound gets a raw deal.  There’s a lot of good things to hear out there.  And all you have to do is get through the diesel engines, high pitched squealing teen girls at pop concerts, and cell phone beeps, boops, and blurts to find them.

There’s the song of the chickadee when you’re out camping in the woods.  Sometimes it’s distant, off through the trees and echoing over the hills.  Other times it’s close, causing you to stop in your hike, trying to spot the little bird along the thousands of branches about you… waiting for it’s next call to try to pinpoint it’s location.

There is also the heavy percussion of storm waves against cupped shore rocks.  Anyone can hear the crash of a wave.  It’s common and, although spectacular, not my favourite.  No… it’s that heavy thumping against rocky hollows that wows me along the coast.  It often follows the initial crash… as the foamy water holds enough power to push on over that first rocky obstacle and fill those hidden caves and carved out pits.  You almost feel it reverberate in your chest.  That’s the ocean sound I miss most.

Another missed sound from home is that of distant foghorns on misty nights.  A foghorn sounds better at night.  It’s clearer with the hum of the day put to bed.  The lone echo as everyone hunkers down for a tea, or book in front of the fire.  It acts as the night watchman of modern times.  With each drawn out moan, it tells you “all’s well.”

Since my most recent move, I’ve gained a sound that acts very much as the foghorn from home.  It relaxes my senses and quiets my pulse.  Some five or six kilometres to my south, a train track leads the way to Montreal.  And a couple of times an hour, when the wind is right and you think to listen, the distant whine of the train’s whistle drones across the air. 

Another sound which has come back to prominence for me, since my move, is that of cold snow, crunching under foot in the woods.  It’s a humbling thing to be in a city so large… yet to be in a place where the loudest sound, at that moment, is that of your own footsteps.

Sports also have favourite sounds for me.  The dink of a puck off a goalpost during a playoff overtime game.  Few sounds bring more drama or heart stopping excitement.  An instant of terror strikes if the post was that of your favourite team’s net.  A moment of anticipated joy if it’s on the enemy’s net.  It always takes a second after the strike to comprehend if something good or bad just occurred. 

There’s the pop of a ball in a glove.  Especially the pop of a glove after it was you who threw the ball.  An echoing snap that begs everyone nearby to look… and see what has just happened. 

The crack of a bat hitting a ball is an amazing sound as well.  Not that ping of ball off composite bats.  But the crack that only can come from a well hit ball with a wooden bat.  The sound that tells you the ball was just hit a long way.  You don’t even need to see the hit to know.  You just hear it go.

Voices are also a wonder for the ears.  Everyone has different voices that bring them pleasure, comfort, or peace.  For me, some are voices of people I don’t know.  Others are the voices of those who are most important to me. 

Bob Cole is an ageing hockey announcer.  He gets names wrong often but there is still nobody calling a hockey game that can create more excitement.  His voice peaks at just the right moments of a game… often times building in pitch and excitement as the play heads up the ice and creating goal post clanging style anticipation as the player winds up for a shot… he bellows the name as the stick arcs up… holding the last syllable as the puck is away…. And you sit waiting for the outcome…

“Here he comes… across the blue line… What a Move… GRETZKYYYYYYY… Scores!”

Vin Scully does for baseball what Bob Cole does for hockey.  He creates magic.  But in a completely different way.

Where Cole builds the moment into a fever, Scully sits you down and proceeds to tell you stories.  Lingering stories about things that wouldn’t be deemed exciting or earth shattering… but stories that hold you in place, wanting to hear more. 

Scully has stories about the home team and the visitors.  He’ll tell you a tale about a veteran superstar or a rookie making his debut.  He always seems to have something to say about everyone and it draws you in, makes you care what happens to that player… or that team. 

And even with the stories, Scully is able to keep us up on the action as well.  He’ll pause in mid sentence… as if taking a breath to continue… and out eases “there’s ball one to Ramirez as he watches it drift outside”… and then while we wait for the next pitch, he continues on with the tale he was just sharing.  Vin Scully brings poetry to sport.

And then there are the voices of family.  There was my gruff grandfather, proclaiming that my dog was Judas! As she leaves my side to return to his only when toast is being buttered at the dinning room table.

There was his wife, my grandmother, never raising her voice but always respected for her gentle spirit… commanding more respect than any thundering discipline.  I remember arriving to visit her once, desperate to go to the washroom as I arrived… I passed her by in the hall, telling her I’d return to hug her in a moment… and as I was closing the bathroom door behind me, I’d hear her soft chuckle… filled with enjoyment and peace.

My other grandmother spoke somewhere in between the gruffness of my grandfather and gentleness of my previously mentioned grandmother.  As a kid, I’d sometimes enjoy the whoopee cushion style sounds coming from myself… and my smile would break in to laughter as she’d look to me and proclaim “Why you dirt!”

My own mother’s sneeze is uniquely hers.  Anytime I’d hear it… especially the nose tickled one, as opposed to the have a cold one… It somehow lightens my mood.  In fact… this reminds me how sometimes sounds counteract each other.  For instance… I could be engulfed in a hockey game… hearing Bob Cole build the excitement as the play heads up the ice… and just as the windup occurs and the name is bellowed out…. GRETZKYYYYY… there’s mom’s “wachoo” from the other side of the room… and I’m instantly brought back down from the wildness to a sense of home.

Dad has a slurp that both goes right through me and makes me think of him all at once.  It’s to the point where if I hear any other slurp, I’ll instantly think of dad and compare that which I just heard to that which I’ve heard thousands of times.  My father will never be far out of mind, as long as I’m in a room containing someone’s bowl of hot soup.

And there’s my sister’s telephone greeting.  Always sounding as if the phone call is some fluke happening… despite her having dialed the number.  “Oh hi” she begins when the other person answers.  It’s said gently, with friendliness, and it is a reminder of family times whenever I hear it. 

Yes, sight may be the star when it comes to senses… but there’s a subtle magic that comes with sound. 



SUNDAY…
--- Dayshift.  Oh how I hate that first 4:30 wake up… never a good night’s sleep.
--- Plainly speaking… there are just too many stupid people using Facebook.  On this day, at least a half dozen head shakingly moronic status updates.  Subtlety and discretion are two things completely unknown by these people.
--- Work is fairly slow going for the day.  Not unusual for a Sunday. 
--- I almost run into the house pulling into the garage.  Uneven ice buildup in the driveway had the car slide off to the side near the garage.  Good I was going slow enough to stop and back up for another run.
--- Funny (sad) fact… we’ve become so interconnected with celebrities that we have lost all compassion for them as people.  Whitney Houston died yesterday… I wasn’t a big fan and admit her life to being quite a train wreck in recent years… but I heard at least four or five people speaking as though it’s just as well she’s dead now.  No problem with the fact people wouldn’t be broken hearted by it… but to speak so coldly about a lost life seems harsh.  Sometimes respectful silence is a lot better than spoken coldness.  Class is a dying trait.

MONDAY…
--- A bit busier at work.  Physio right after that… I’m not home and ready to relax until about 8:30.  A little TV… but tired.  Staying up late for night shift isn’t always easy.

TUESDAY…
--- An afternoon walk before nap time.  Stumble across a woodpecker.  Take a few pics and videos of him and then realize, on the rest of the walk, that quite a few trees around here have been gone over by woodpeckers.  Neat.
--- Work is steady and the weather fairly mild for a mid February day.

WEDNESDAY…
--- Heavy duty burger for supper.  Five Guys Burgers… tasty… but so much food.
--- Not much out of the ordinary at work.

THURSDAY…
--- Up to early… about 10:30.  A little TV and then to Mazda for a tune up.  I do a bit of a walk while they work but it’s very industrial there and the traffic is too noisy to be enjoyable.
--- A few groceries at Farm Boy after Mazda and then, after some lunch, I do a peaceful woods walk.  45 minutes flies by… it feels like I’m out there for fifteen instead.  And there’s something great about being in a city of more than a million… yet I spent 45 minutes just outside my house in a forest where woodpeckers are the only company I have and the sound of my footsteps in the snow is the most dominant noise.

FRIDAY…
--- Up too early.  Lunch with Karl.  Go to the Blackburn Arms.  Good ol’ Bangers and Mash.
--- A walk after I bring Karl back to his sister’s and some TV in the evening.

SATURDAY…
--- Physio is followed by a candy run for movie night.  And then a bunch are over in the evening for Troll 2 on Blue Ray.  A bizarrely bad, yet fun movie.  A good time.

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