His Eye is on the Cheezit

Whew. What a day. I was on the phone giving and scheduling interviews all day. Drew a few gulls in between. The Martha Stewart Radio interview was really, really fun. Marion Roach loves the book and was really warm and welcoming. She said she is giving it to half her Christmas list this year. Yeah! I imagined those words beaming up to a satellite and beaming back down into millions of kitchens and cars, and I liked the image.
I have an insight, after today, into the work of a publicist and what that must be like. It is exhausting. But man, Taryn Roeder does beautiful work. And I appreciate her so much, knowing what she does all day, which is be really nice and upbeat to try to engender interest in the books she's working with. She makes amazing things happen. She was the little bird that got my book into Ketzel Levine's hands at NPR! Figured that out this morning. Taryn, my sincerest thanks.
One really nice thing that happened today: I found out that my commentary, "When Hummingbirds Come Home," will be included in the next Driveway Moments CD from NPR. The commentaries and stories that get included in these compilations are nominated by listeners. They're called Driveway Moments because people sit in their car until the story is over, because they can't stand to leave without hearing the end of the story. Another of mine, about Buck the Bull, also got nominated, but they could only include one, so I asked them to include the hummingbird story. It's just a bit more magical and quintessentially Zick than the bull story. Cliff's notes: it's about three orphaned hummingbirds that I raised, released, and that migrated and returned home the following spring. You can hear both commentaries, or waste an entire evening, here.
So my head is spinning, and I'm officially overstimulated. Working on about nine hours of sleep in the last two nights, which ain't enough. The kids have coughs and I am up schlepping cough syrup to them at all hours. Bill has taken to calling me Media Mogul, but I feel more like a mogul, as in speed bump.
Along about 3:30 this afternoon, Chet came into the studio and asked for a walk, and he wouldn't take no for an answer.
He bossed me around, barking in that rolly Demi Moore growl,
and he kept play-bowing and dancing around.
I'd pet him and he'd dance away and then as soon as I bent back to my work, he'd poke me with his toenails, paddling away at my leg. Dog's a darn pain in the leg. But oh, I need him so. He knew I needed some air and a change of scene. So we went for a walk. It was a flat, gray, dark day, no good for photography, but warm. I donned my flame-orange vest and Buck Fever hat (I look soo good in it) and set out with Chet, having fun by mentally writing my own obituary as I went. Chet and I learned something about deer behavior during hunting season. Chet found two groups of deer, all does, all bedded down in thick cover--thorns and sumac. Of course he chased them, cheating death, and eventually came back. The second pod of deer included six animals, tightly bedded down in sumac and brambles. Chet put three deer out of there, and I thought that was it. And three more does shot out of the same cover, widely spaced, running with their heads down just like soldiers trying to make it past gunfire. Amazing. They sat very tightly and waited amazingly long to leave. I was standing right there but they held their ground. Doubtless they noted that I was unarmed; doubtless they know my scent and know I don't kill deer. This is not behavior I have witnessed before, but it speaks of the pressure on the animals during hunting season, and to their coping mechanisms. I felt bad to have spooked them out of their haunts, but no gunshots followed either flush.
After that, I leashed Chet, and we listened to a flock of turkeys rustling through the leaf litter, and turned for home. It sure feels good to get some exercise, even at risk of being mistaken for venison. I never have been able to stay inside for a whole week. I wish it would rain so walking wouldn't be such a temptation.
Since I didn't get any pictures outdoors today I will leave you with another Chet Baker fix. I walked into the kitchen to find this domestic tableau, almost something Vermeer would set up. How sweet, I thought. The kids are reading to Chet. And then I noticed the Cheezits, and the reason for Chet's intense interest became clear. I call this series, "His Eye is on the Cheezit."

And now, I will emulate Chet, and attempt to sleep like a dog. Oh, to be able to curl up any time of day on whatever pile of blankets presents itself, and sleep the dreamless sleep of the just, undercommitted, and innocent.


10 Comments:
I am aiming a kiss right at the big freckle on his little gremlin face. Mwah!
How I love him! And how I appreciate that you emailed me in the midst of your mogulling today!
hugs all 'round
Eddie's mother
Thanks for the Chet fix. I must say you are braver than I am walking in the woods in hunting season. Even if my leg allowed it right now I wouldn't go if I could paint my whole body orange and wear day glo underwear! Some of those guys are really trigger happy...I have a neighbor who lost a big black and white dairy cow one year...how do you mistake a holstein for a deer????
I'm so glad you're back, but I loved the dispatches from the Eden of the Southwest.
My vote for driveway moments classic goes to the "Family that Brakes for Roadkill" piece. Hearing it, I realized you were a kindred spirit, because at the time, I had a dead American Woodcock in my freezer. I'd found it at the base of a building across the street from the radio station where I work; it'd stopped on its migration to feed at the pocket park between buildings (with another migrant trap, an old cemetery, next door), was likely flushed when someone walked by, hit the window, and died. I took it home, froze it, and showed it off to my friends. "Hey, wanna see my woodcock?!?" "Yeah! Cool!" (Luckily, I've found a tribe of like-minded beings who don't mind that the ice cream is cheek by jowl with a double-bagged Hermit Thrush.) I donated my bird-cicle to the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philly -- but not before showing it off to my pals at the Rosetree Park Hawkwatch. Funny how "Hey, wanna see my woodcock" is only dirty to non-science chimps.
I had a welcome Boston dose today when I visited my wonderful neighbors who have a wild little BT girl named Maggie, a wonderful, energetic sweetie who bounds rather than runs around the house and yard. She brought a succession of toys into the room for my approval and edification; I wanted to swipe her, but I really like these people, and my cats would disapprove. So I left with what was left of my dignity and a rooster tote bag (no, not a bag for totin' roosters).
Were they white cheddar cheezits? Those are the best!
What a wonder that doggie is. If I could sleep as deep as a dog...
The world is beginning to learn what all of us have known for a long time. You're talented, you're passionate, and you basically rock.
You seem to occupy a nearly perfect place...you are connected to the world through art and blogging, and yet you live on a parcel of land that can't be called anything BUT Eden.
Hmmm...a media speed bump? That's an interesting image. I nominate the Roadkill piece as well. I don't have any critters in my freezer (too small), but I do have several owl pellets. Does that count?
Lovely Chet pictures with the kiddos. Mine are healthier than me at the moment. I can hardly squeak out a sound.
congratulations! i just put your book on my Christmas wish list....
I don't have a favorite Driveway Moments - I love them all. Congratulations, Julie.
Does Cheese-it Chet like pretzels? Both of mine spit them out.
Phoebe reads will Liam draws?
That works.
Are you getting a new camera like another unnamed blogger?
Varietal Cheezits are a no-no here. Neither the kids nor the dog appreciate them, though we have tried. Don't know about pretzels. Banned for their carb content.
He's very funny about dog biscuits. Will only eat them if the Fed-ex guy or mailman hands them to him. Although often he'll make a big show of burying them, which is Chet's equivalent of feeding them to the dog.
I plan to bogart Bill's new camera whilst deciding which camera is perfect for me. I'm limited to ones that I can slide up and down muddy slopes with, which rules out the honkin' lens on his. I want telephoto power without weight or bulkiness, which is a tough thing to want.
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